DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS v ELIAS MWASHITETE AND ANOTHER 1997 TLR 319 (HC)
Court High Court of Tanzania - Mbeya
Judge Mwipopo J
CRIMINAL APPEAL 33 OF 1996 G
17 December 1997
Flynote
Criminal law - Robbery - Proof of - Circumstantial evidence - Evidence must lead to
irresistible inference
-Headnote
The Director of Public Prosecutions appealed against the acquittal of the first and
second H respondents in the Mbozi District Court on a charge of armed robbery.
The evidence was to the effect that 65 bags of coffee had been stolen from the
complainant by a group of robbers in a lorry and saloon car. The robbers who were
armed with a gun broke into a godown and took 65 bags of coffee, 45 bags of which
were subsequently found in the possession of the first respondent. The I villagers
whose
1997 TLR p320
A coffee had been stolen followed the lorry and kept guard over the first
respondent's house until the police arrived to give them assistance. The first
respondent's defence was one of an alibi. He claimed that he had been wrongly
identified as one of the robbers and this identification had been based on an
inadequate opportunity to make a proper identification. On appeal,
B Held:
There were a number of possibilities as to why some of the stolen coffee had been
found in the first respondent's house. These were reasonable possibilities and it was
accordingly inappropriate to use circumstantial evidence to convict the first
respondent as the circumstantial evidence would C have to have lead irresistibly to
the only conclusion that the first respondent was involved in the robbery in some
way. The acquittal was accordingly in order.
Case Information
Appeal dismissed and ordered that the coffee in question be returned to the
complainant as it had been sufficiently identified as being the complainant's property.
D Case referred to:
1. Athuman s/o Mwarungwe v Republic Civil Appeal No 18 of 1991 -
(Mbeya) (unreported)
Mulokozi for the appellant.
E Mkumbe for the first respondent.
[zJDz]Judgment
Mwipopo J:
This appeal has been taken by the Director of Public Prosecutions against the
acquittal of Elias s/o F Mwashitete as the first respondent who was the first accused
in the lower court of Mbozi District Court and of Joseph s/o Michael as the second
respondent who was the second accused in the same trial court. The acquittal was
from charges of armed robberies contrary to ss 285 and 286 of the Penal Code as
amended by Act 10 of 1989.
G The appellant at this stage was represented by the learned Mr Mulokozi State
Attorney whereas the first respondent Elias s/o Mwashitete was represented by the
learned Mr Mkumbe Advocate. The second respondent Joseph s/o Michael has gone
underground and can't be traced through his H addresses given to the police at the
time of his arrest and even through his address given to the trial court at the time of
his acquittal being PO Box 304, Mbozi Mechani of Mlowo village c/o Ten cell leader
James s/o Shangwa. Both sides asked the court to proceed with the appeal with the
present respondent and defer the appeal against the second respondent to another
future date in order to I do quick justice to the first
1997 TLR p321
MWIPOPO J
appellant who has always been attending this court both by himself in person and his
advocate, The A Mbeya RCO (Regional CID Officer) undertook to continue looking
for the second respondent in order to serve him to appear for this appeal.
The written grounds of appeal of the Director of Public Prosecutions were
summarized by the learned Mr Mulokozi that the trial court was wrong to acquit the
first respondent despite the B overwhelming evidence that the complainants traced
the robbers' motor vehicle from the scene of the armed robbers at their Iporoto
Village Primary Cooperative Society's go down to the house of C the first respondent
at Lungwa Village; that part of their sixty-five bags of coffee stolen and loaded in the
robbers motor vehicle at gun point within their sight found their way to the house of
the first respondent and the same forty-five bags were properly identified by their
owners that the first respondent was seen and identified handing the stolen sixty-five
bags of coffee at his house; and D lastly, that the doctrine of recent possession should
has been applied to find the first respondent guilty of armed robbery as charged in
view that the first respondent was found with the stolen sixty-five bags of coffee
hardly five hours after they were robbed from the Iporoto Village Cooperative
Society. The other ground of appeal involved an order for restitution of the forty-five
E bags of coffee seized by the police from the first respondent to the same first
respondent. The learned Mr Mulokozi argued that since the identity of the sixty-five
bags of coffee had been well established to belong to different peasant members of
Iporoto Cooperative Society by their special F numbers and as shown in Exhibit P4.
On the other hand the learned Mr Mkumbe for the first respondent has vehemently
opposed this appeal and supported the decision of the trial Mbozi District Court in
acquitting the first respondent G as well as ordering the forty-five bags of coffee to
revert to him. The learned Mr Mkumbe Advocate argued that no eye witness
identified the first respondent to have been seen at the time of the robbery at Iporoto
Cooperative Society.
The learned Mr Mkumbe advocate further argued that the identity purportedly made
by PW2 of the first respondent at his house while he was with the occupants of the
robbers lorry was dubious and H unreliable for it was based on clothes only at a long
distance, 100 paces away at night or dawn, and that the same clothes were not proved
to belong to the first respondent.
Similarly, on the identity of the forty-five bags of coffee found at the house of the first
respondent, I the learned Mr Mkumbe argued,
1997 TLR p322
MWIPOPO J
A that they belonged to the first respondent who was a good farmer with 61/2 acre
coffee farm from which he harvested them and he told the police about them even
before they searched his house.
The learned Mr Mkumbe further counter argued that since the family of the first
respondent was not B at home for the entire day of 6 September 1995 it was possible
that the villagers from Iporoto village who testified as PWs two, four, five and nine
and who had kept vigil over the first respondent's house from 5.00 am until 6.00 pm
when the police came are the ones who broke his house and planted inside that house
the weighing machine of Iporoto Cooperative Society and C marked the forty five
bags of coffee of the first respondent with their respective membership numbers in
order to fix up the first respondent with this offence.
The ownership of the coffee, according to the learned Mr Mkumbe, was properly held
by the trial D magistrate that it should be determined in another civil suit. He cited
the case of Athuman s/o Mwarungwe v R (1) as an authority that ownership dispute
over property should be determined in a civil suit.
The Trial Magistrate, the learned Mr Safari, seemed to disbelieve the entire story of
the prosecution E witnesses that they followed up the lorry of the robbers from their
village of Iporoto up to the Lungwa village of the first respondent. He also held that
the failure of the Iporoto villagers to mark the numbers of the robbers lorry, to block
the road so that it could not leave the first respondent's F house, to raise an alarm
and to summon the help of the villagers of Lungwa as well as to call the Lungwa
village leaders to testify in court made them untrustworthy of any credibility. The
trial magistrate further believed the testimony of the first respondent and held based
on the credible defence of the first respondent that the Iporoto villagers are the ones
who broke the house of the G first respondent planted in his house the weighing
machine of Iporoto Cooperative Society and marked the bags of coffee of the first
respondent with their numbers in order to incriminate the first respondent with this
crime.
H At the first time the respondents were taken to the Mbozi District Court on 11
September 1995 there were three accused namely Elia s/o Mwashitete the present
first respondent who was the first accused, Tobias s/o Mayele who was the second
accused and Joseph s/o Michael who was the third accused the present second
respondent. The charge sheet too contained two counts of armed robbery contrary to
ss 285 and 286 of the Penal Code in the first count and the store I breaking and
stealing contrary to s 296(1) of the Penal Code.
1997 TLR p323
MWIPOPO J
The same original charge sheet was substituted with another charge sheet on 4
December 95 after A the second accused Tobias s/o Mayele was on 20 November
1995 under 98(1) of the CPA by the withdrawal of the charge in his favour. The
present two respondents were left in the present charge sheet to face the trial. The
substituted charge sheet contained only one count of armed robbery contrary to of ss
285 and 286 of the Penal Code having left out the previously second count of store B
breaking and stealing contrary to s 296(1) of the Penal Code.
As much as issues of credibility of witnesses and findings of facts are left to be
determined by the trial court there seems to have been grave errors in the finding of
the facts of the trial court which C need to be corrected by this court on first appeal.
The background of the crime which occurred in Iporoto village twenty kilometres
away at the scene of the crime was not considered seriously by the trial court. I better
start from there. From the testimonies of PW1 Witson s/o Songa the Manager of
Iporoto Rural Cooperative Society, PW2 Mateso s/o Kailon, PW3 Festo s/o Namoyela,
PW4 D Fabiano s/o Kamola a committee member of Shanwe Iporoto Cooperative
Society, PW7 Raisi s/o Malimoja the village Executive Officer (VEO) of Iporoto
village government and PW10 Eliakim s/o Ali the watchman of Iporoto village
Cooperative Society the sequence of the events was that at 3.00 am after midnight a
lorry and a saloon car came to Iporoto Cooperative Society's coffee godown to E
store break and steal coffee from it. PW10 the watchman sneaked into hiding in time
to see what occurred. When the thieves started breaking the store he went to ring a
bell signifying danger and most of the villagers came out from their homes in full
vigour to give help to the watchman to F apprehend the burglars. But, they were
met with a terrifying firing of bullets by the armed robbers which kept all the
villagers at bay far away and in hiding. The armed robbers continued loading the
sixty-five bags of coffee worth Shs 5,516,00/= and left undisturbed. But, it occurred to
some G villagers that they should follow the lorry which was not moving very fast
with bicycles to see where it went. Among such villagers was PW2 who followed the
lorry for twenty kilometres until the lorry ended up in Lungwa village at the house of
the first respondent. They didn't know where the saloon H car had gone. They kept
in hiding about one hundred paces away from the house seeing the coffee bags being
unloaded into the house of the first respondent without raising an alarm until the
lorry later left that house for another unknown destination after 5.00 am. They
decided to keep vigil over that house until morning when they informed the village
leaders about this incident but the I
1997 TLR p324
MWIPOPO J
A village leaders and people refused to render them any help for fear of retribution
from the first respondent until 6.00 pm when the police came from the District offices
at Vwawa where some of the Iporoto villagers had gone to seek help. During the day
more villagers continued pouring around the house of the first respondent until they
became a big crowd. Some came with bicycles others B walked on foot for four
hours such as PW7 who left Iporoto on foot at 8.30 am and reached the house of the
first Respondent at 12.00 noon. Out of the whole crowd no villager from Lungwa
village gave them any help of keen interest to enquire what was happening. But, no
doubt it was a big C unheard of event in the vicinity for the house of first
respondent to remain under guard by strangers from an unknown village. The village
leaders of Lungwa were quite nervous and apprehensive of the whole episode, for the
police found them at their village government's office also, waiting for the D police
to come most likely.
With this background, which was not considered by the trial court in its assessment
of the evidence as a whole, I find as a true fact all this narration of prosecution
witnesses did happen.
E Since there was firing of guns at Iporoto village all the witnesses from Iporoto
knew that the robbers were fully armed and meant business with their guns. It was
expecting too much from them that they should have seized the lorry while it was
unloading the coffee at the first respondent's house. Similarly they could not have
raised an alarm for they could have been easily killed by F exposing themselves to
the armed robbers. Failure to identify the numbers of the lorry can be easily be
explained in the same vein of being scared to note such numbers and being novice
peasants. Further they successfully traced their coffee and kept guard of it until the
police came to give them assistance -- fifteen hours later on. The Iporoto villagers are
courageous and vigilant citizens who G played their preventive role to protect their
property to the best of their intelligence and means for which they ought to be
congratulated. With this background I also dismiss the findings of the trial court that
the Iporoto villagers are the ones who broke into the house of the first respondent
and planted their weighing scales there and printed the bags of coffee of the first
respondent with their H numbers in order to incriminate the first respondent. I find
the opposite as testified by the prosecution witnesses to be the truth that the forty
five coffee bags found in the house of the first respondent were deposited there by the
armed robbers out of the loot they stole from Iporoto I Cooperative Society at gun
point. Similarly, the weighing scales of Iporoto
1997 TLR p325
MWIPOPO J
Cooperative Society was stolen and brought to be kept in the house of the first
respondent by the A armed robbers themselves.
As argued by the learned Mr Mulokozi State Attorney the issue of the identity of the
forty-five bags of coffee was conclusively proved to belong to the different members
of the Iporoto village villagers because their numbers were found marked on the bags
and as per their cooperative society's office B book exhibit P 4. To find that the
villagers of Iporoto village went and broke the doors of the house of the first
respondent and marked the bags with their own numbers is quite absurd for the very
Iporoto villagers testified otherwise and the first respondent was not there to see.
After all according C to the testimony of PW2 the wife of the first respondent was in
that house for the night, morning and until 2.00 pm when she left the house not to
return again until when the police came and found nobody in that house not even the
children and both 2 wives of the first respondent who lived there had abandoned the
house, and the first respondent testified not to know where they went. D
The next issue for consideration is the identity of the first respondent. Both the
learned Mr Safari and the learned Mr Mkumbe Advocate held the view that the
identity was not safe to base a conviction on it since it was dark and only the clothes
of the first respondent were identified and they E did not know each other prior to
the day of incident. Further, the identifying witness was standing in hiding one
hundred paces away and that no identification parade was made to ascertain if the
prosecution witnesses fully recognized the first respondent. F
The only witness who identified the first respondent was PW2 Mateso s/o Kailon. He
testified that he saw and identified the first respondent by clothes with a shirt which
was reddish with blue dots. This piece of evidence came out of re-examination of this
witness (PW2) by the public prosecutor Inspector Sangija. Why didn't he bring it up
during examination in chief? Even during cross G examination of this witness (PW2)
no question was asked on the identity of the first respondent. So, this question of
identifying the first respondent was wrongly admitted in the first place for reexamination
and must arise out of cross-examined questions -- unless the court
permits such H new questions in which case the other side must be given time to
cross examine on the new question arising out of the re-examination. The first
respondent was not given such chance to cross examine PW2 after he testified on reexamination
that he identified the first respondent from his clothes. On this legal
ground of improperly admitting evidence of identification of the respondent I
1997 TLR p326
MWIPOPO J
A in re-examination without affording chance to the first respondent cross examine
on it coupled up with other valid reasons on identity of first respondent referred to by
the trial magistrate and the learned Mr Mkumbe I find that the first respondent was
not properly identified at all to have seen the B armed robberies when they were
unloading the stolen coffee at his house. Since none of the prosecution witnesses
identified anybody at Iporoto village and improperly identified the first respondent at
his house the defence of alibi of the first respondent that he slept with his first wife at
his Vwawa house remained unrefuted by the prosecution.
C The next issue for determination is whether the first respondent is guilty of
receiving stolen property. Why did the robbers bring the coffee to the first
respondent's house? Can it be necessarily inferred that he conspired with them to
keep it for them for storage purposes in order to share the loot. There are many
possibilities to it but three possibilities seem to be cogent to have D been the case.
The first possibility is that the first respondent was part and parcel of the armed
robbers as their planner or financier etc and that they brought the forty-five bags of
stolen coffee as his share of the loot. In this situation he would be a principal offender
and guilty of armed robbery as E charged. The other possibility is that the first
respondent was not one of the principal offenders and guilty as charged for armed
robbery but a mere receiver of the stolen property as a usual customer -- buyer of the
stolen coffee or as a usual storer of the stolen coffee for a fee. In this second possibility
he would be a guilty receiver of stolen property for which he could be convicted F as
such under s 311(1) of the Penal Code or if the doctrine of recent possession can apply
he could be convicted of the principal offence. In this case the doctrine of recent
possession would not apply to him for he was not identified to have slept in that
house. But, his wife, who was in that house and left the premises at 2.00 pm to hide
away from her own house should have been visited G with this offence and so
charged. She wasn't even charged for the weighing scales which was found hidden
under the bed-mattress in one of the five bedrooms of the first respondent!
H The third possibility, that since the first respondent testified to have mentioned
to the police before searching the house that he had forty-seven bags of coffee in his
house he too might have been a victim of house breaking and stealing by the same
armed robbers as was Iporoto Cooperative Society. The robbers are intelligent people,
they might have planned to go and rob the I first respondent just
1997 TLR p327
MWIPOPO J
after robbing Iporoto village. They succeeded in breaking the door, but out of the fear
that they would A be caught with the marked forty five coffee bags of Iporoto they
dumped all the forty five marked coffee bags of Iporoto, kept for themselves the
remaining twenty bags from Iporoto which possibility had no good marks on which
marks they to erased on the way from Iporoto to Lungwa village and B added up
another loot of forty-seven bags of the first respondent which were unmarked to go
away with a total of sixty-seven bags of coffee that night!
With these reasonable possibilities it is not easy to use circumstantial evidence to
convict the first C respondent with any criminal offence because circumstantial
evidence does not irresistibly lend to only one inference that the first respondent
received the forty-five bags with guilty knowledge that it was stolen. Had it been his
wife who was at home it would have been a different matter.
As for the weighing scales the Public Prosecutor was very funny to have not included
it in the D particulars of the offence although it was not disputed that it belonged to
Iporoto Cooperative Society. Nevertheless, it was already returned to the same
complainant. The finding of the trial court that the forty-five bags need another civil
suit to establish its ownership was erroneous and it is hereby quashed. The same
forty-five bags were conclusively established to belong to the E respective peasants
of Iporoto Cooperative Society as per Exhibit P 4. The same be returned to them
immediately. Otherwise, this appeal is dismissed for the over given reasons. F
1997 TLR p328
A
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