MWALIMU PAUL JOHN MHOZYA v ATTORNEY GENERAL (No. 2) 1996 TLR 229 (HC)
Court High Court of Tanzania - Dar es Salaam
Judge Samatta JK
G
CIVIL CASE No. 206 OF 1993
July 27, 1995 H
Flynote
Civil Practice and Procedure - No case to answer - Standard of proof upon a
submission of `No Case to Answer' in a civil case - Standard of proof in civil and
criminal cases distinguished
Civil Practice and Procedure - No Case to Answer - Dismissal of suit on the basis of a
I submission of `No Case to Answer' - Test to be applied by the Court in reaching
decision
1996 TLR p230
-Headnote
The plaintiff sought from the High Court the following orders of declaration: (a) that
the A Constitution of the United Republic of Tanzania had been violated by
Zanzibar joining the Organisation of Islamic Conference (the 'OIC'); that President
Ali Hassan Mwinyi of the United Republic of Tanzania was guilty of permitting or
enabling the said violation to take place; and (c) that President Ali Hassan Mwinyi's
continued exercise of presidential B powers was unconstitutional and a potential
danger to the country and its citizens. At the close of the plaintiff's case, counsel for
the defendant submitted that there was no case to answer and invited the court to
dismiss the case; he chose to call no evidence:
Held:
C (i) In a civil case a defendant can, at the close of the plaintiff's case, submit
that there is no case to answer, and a submission of no case to answer in a civil case
stands on the same footing as a submission of no case to answer in a criminal case,
save that there is a difference in the standard of proof;
D (ii) When dismissal of the plaintiff's case on the basis that no case has been
made out is prayed for, the court should not ask itself whether the evidence adduced
by the plaintiff establishes what would finally be required to be established, but
whether there is evidence upon which a court, applying its mind reasonably to such
evidence, could or might (not should or ought to) find for the plaintiff;
E (iii) A submission of no case to answer cannot be upheld if there is
sufficient evidence on record upon which a court might make a reasonable mistake
and enter judgment for the plaintiff;
(iv) The test to be applied at the close of the defendant's case is `what
ought a reasonable court to do', while the test to be applied in determining a
submission of no case to answer is `what might a reasonable court do'; F
(v) As the claim that Zanzibar joined the OIC is not admitted by the
defendant, the burden is on the plaintiff to establish that fact and he has not
succeeded to do that; the exhibits he has tendered in court only show the
Government's efforts to find out whether Zanzibar joining the OIC would be
constitutional; G
(vi) The general belief among members of the public that Zanzibar had
joined the OIC is not a basis for holding that the plaintiff had discharged his burden
in this case;
(vii) No admissible evidence has been given to show the role which the
President played in Zanzibar joining the OIC; the evidence of radio and newspaper
reports H brought by the plaintiff is hearsay and inadmissible under s 62 of the
Evidence Act, 1967.
Case Information
Suit dismissed with costs.
Cases referred to:
I 1. Daikin Air Conditioning (E.A.) Ltd v Harvard University [1996] TLR 1
1996 TLR p230
SAMATTA JK
A 2. Supreme Service Station (1969) (Pvt) Ltd v Fox and Goodridge (Pvt)
Ltd, 1971 (1) RLR 1
The appelant appeared in person.
P. Mwidunda, for the respondent.
[zJDz]Judgment
Samatta JK: B
In this matter the plaintiff seeks various reliefs including the following declarations:
1. The Constitution of the United Republic of Tanzania (the Constitution)
was violated by Zanzibar joining an organisation known as the Organisation of C
Islamic Conference (OIC);
2. His Excellency Ali Hassan Mwinyi, the President of the United
Republic, is guilty of permitting or enabling that violation to take place and is,
therefore, personally answerable for the violation; and D
3. His Excellency Ali Hassan Mwinyi's continued exercise of presidential
powers is unconstitutional as well as a potential danger to the well-being of the
United Republic and its citizens.
At the close of the plaintiff's case, Mr Mwidunda, counsel for the respondent,
submitted E that the respondent had no case to answer, and invited me to dismiss
the suit. He elected to call no evidence.
The plaintiff's pleading is in a form of plaint. It seemed to me that the matter should
have been brought by way of a petition but, bearing in mind that the plaintiff was
unrepresented, I was not inclined to drive him off the judgment seat on that ground.
F Accordingly, I allowed him to prosecute the case as filed. Only one witness gave
evidence-the plaintiff himself. His evidence can, I think, be summarised as follows.
He is a teacher by profession, teaching at Kibasila Secondary School. He has a Master's
Degree in Physics. He told the court that sometime in 1992 he learnt through the
press G that Zanzibar had joined the OIC. He knows as a fact that later President
Mwinyi announced to the nation on Radio Tanzania that Zanzibar had joined the
OIC and that she had done so in her own economic interests. The plaintiff then
produced, without any objection from Mr Mwidunda, three letters: one from the then
Attorney-General to the H Minister for Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation
(Exh P1); the second is a letter from the Minister for Foreign Affairs and
International Co-operation to the Attorney General (Exh P2), responding to Exh P1;
and the third one is a letter from the I Attorney-General to the Prime Minister and
first Vice-President (Exh P3). In view of the importance of their con-
1996 TLR p232
SAMATTA JK
tents in determining the issues before me, I propose, at the risk of making this ruling
A unduly long, to quote them in extenso.
All the three letters are in Swahili. Exh P1 reads as follows:
`Ndugu Ahmed Hassan Diria (Mb)
Waziri wa Mambo ya Nje na B
Ushirikiano wa Kimataifa,
DAR ES SALAAM
KUH: MAOMBI YA ZANZIBAR KUJIUNGA
NA UMOJA WA ORGANISATION OF C
ISLAMIC CONFERENCE
Zanzibar imewasilisha kwenye Chama (CCM) maombi yake ya kutaka
kujiunga na Umoja uitwao-the Organisation of Islamic Conference. Nimetakiwa na
Ofisi ya Waziri Mkuu nitoe ushauri juu ya ombi hilo.
2. Kwa vile suala la Mambo ya Nje ya Ushirikiano wa Kimataifa ni suala la
Muungano ambalo D unasimamia, nitashukuru kama utanipatia maoni ya Wizara
yake juu ya ombi hilo. Natakiwa nitoe ushaur huo haraka ili hatimaye uamuzi
ufanywe.
(Signed)
D Z Lubuva E
MWANASHERIA MKUU WA SERIKALI'
Exh P2 is in following terms:
`Nd D Z Lubuva, Mb,
Mwanasheria Mkuu wa Serikali,
DAR ES SALAAM F
KUH: MAOMBI YA ZANZIBAR KUJIUNGA NA
UMOJA WA ORGANIZATION OF THE
ISLAMIC CONFERENCE
Kutokana na waraka wako wenye somo lililotajwa hapo juu uliopelekwa CCM,
uchambuzi wa G muundo wa chombo hicho unaonekana wazi kuwa ulipoanza
ulikuwa na misimamo yenye maana ya kujikinga kiuchumi na kisiasa.
Wanachama wa mwanzo waanzilishi walikuwa Pakistan na Kingdom of Saudi
Arabia. Hizo ni nchi zenye katiba ambayo ni wazi kabisa imefungwa kwenye misingi
ya dini ya Kiislam kutokana na Katiba zao. H
Ni kweli kuna utatanishi juu ya chombo hiki, kama inavyoeleweka, na
kutokana na jina lake-au lengo lake ni kusambaza Uislam au kuwasilimisha watu kwa
hila-au kwa nguvu. Wanachama wake sio wote wenye kuamini dini ya Kiislam, au
ndivyo Katiba inavyosema. Maelezo hayo hayana misingi ya ukweli. I
Katika jumla ya wanachama wake asilimia 90 ya mataifa na wanachama
wanaofuata mtindo wa circularism na siyo itikadi ya kidini.
1996 TLR p233
SAMATTA JK
Mataifa yote ya Kiarabu kama Egypt na Indonesia wana Katiba ya secular-state
inayooanisha dini A zote ikiwa pamoja na nchi za Ghuba, Sudan na Afrika ya
Kaskazini zote zinafuata mitindo ya dunia kwenye katiba zao. Hivi sasa wenye katiba
ya kujifunga na udini kuwa ni policy ni Iran; Pakistan na Saudi Arabia. Zilizobaki
kama Comoros na Mauritania wanajiita Jamhuri za Kiislam bila kufuata B taratibu na
sheria za Kiislam, wala kwenye katiba zao hazionyeshi hivyo na taratibu za utawala
wao ni wa kidunia na kufuata sheria za madola.
Kwa kuendeleza somo hilo kwa ajili ya uchambuzi zaidi ili tuelewe mwenendo
wa jumuia hiyo, kuna haja ya kueleza kuwa Equatorial Guinea, Lebanon, Cameroon
na Uganda Madola hayo yote yana C katiba inayofuata mtindo wa kimataifa. Hata
hivyo kuangalia tu jina kunaleta tafsiri isiyo na uchambuzi kwa sababu nchi zingine
asilimia kubwa si wanaofuata dini ya Kiislam wamekuwa wanachama, ama kwa ajili
ya historia au kwa mengine. D
Umoja unaonyesha kuwa unashughulikia zaidi wanachama wake kama ilivyo
taratibu za Umoja wowote ule duniani.
UPIGAJI KURA
Wanaopiga kura ni wanachama, lakini umoja unatoa mwanya kwa
`OBSERVER' na dola inapata faida zote za maendeleo bila ya kuwa mwanachama
kamili. Kwa kifupi, ni mwanachama ndiye E anayefaidikazaidi; na kati ya
Mwangalizi na asiye mwanachama, misaada hutolewa zaidi kwa mwanachama.
TANZANIA
Tanzania ni Muungano wa dola mbili yenye katiba moja, ambayo inatamka
wazi kuwa Tanzania ni nchi isiyo na dini ila wananchi wake wanazo dini zao. Ina
maana kidunia Tanzania Secular F state-isiyovutiwa na dini ya mtu. Pia katika
Katiba Tanzania imeruhusu wananchi wake kuweza kufanya ibada zao wanazoamini
bila ya bugudha. Bali Tanzania ni Jamhuri ya Muungano iliyounganisha dola mbili,
bila ya kujali ukubwa wala uchumi: lakini katiba imeweka wazi vyombo vya G
Muungano, yaani moja katika uzito wa jamhuri ni siasa ya mambo ya nje ambacho ni
chombo kimoja katika vyombo vinavyosimamiwa na Katiba ya Muungano.
Unapojiunga kuwa mwanachama atakayewakilishwa kwenye vikao vya
unongozi wa juu atakuwa Rais wa Jamhuri. Bendera itakayopepea itakuwa ni ile ya
Tanzania. Siasa itakayoendeshwa itakuwa H iliyounganishwa kikatiba, yaani siasa ya
kimataifa. Kutokana na maelekezo hayo, ushaur wetu ni kama ufuatao.
(a) Kama ni lazima kuwa katika Umoja wa Organisation of the Islamic
Conference, tufuatilie msimamo wa Nigeria na Mozambique ambao walikuwa
observer; na pia kwa sababu Tanzania imefaidika kupatiwa misaada kutokana IOC
kwa ajili ya mradi wa Kibiti-Lindi bila ya I kuwa mwanachama.
1996 TLR p234
SAMATTA JK
A (b) Indonesia si mwanachama kutokana na katiba yake, lakini walianza
kujiunga kama permanent participant na hadi leo Dunia inaamini wanachama, lakini
katiba ilibidi waitafutie mbinu ya kisheria na wakatokana na msimamo huo. Pengine
Tanzania tungeendeleza uchunguzi juu ya mtindo huo.
(c) Tanzania inawesa ikawa associate member na itakuwa non voting (sic)
member bila ya B kupinga katiba ya Jamhuri ya Muungano.
Kwa kumaliza na kwa kukubali kuwa Katiba ni yetu inayotuongoza-uamuzi
wetu ni lazima kuangalia maslahi ya Taifa na kuepusha fikra potofu miongoni mwa
wananchi wa dola yetu. Hivyo kwa Zanzibar C kujiunga peekee ni suala la katiba.
Ufumbuzi ni kama nilivyoelezea hapo juu.
(Signed) A Hassan Diria
WAZIRI WA MAMBO YA NJE NA USHIRIKIANO WA
KIMATAIFA'
Exh P3 reads as follows: D
`Nd J S Malecela, (Mb)
Waziri Mkuu na Makumu wa
Kwanza wa Rais,
DODOMA. E
KUH: MAOMBI YA ZANZIBAR KUJIUNGA NA `THE
ORGANISATION OF ISLAMIC CONFERENCE'
1. Kwa Dokezo lako la tarehe 21 Septemba, 1991 ulinitaka nifanye uchambuzi
wa kisheria na nikupe maoni yangu.
2. Nimefanya uchambuzi wa Katiba ya `Organisation' hiyo pamoja na Katiba
ya Jamhuri ya Muungano F wa Tanzania. Kutokana na uchambuzi huo, maoni na
ushauri wangu ni kama ifuatavyo:
(i) Chimbuko la Umoja huu ni Mkutano wa viongozi wa Nchi na Serikali
uliofanyika Rabat, Morocco, 1969.
(ii) Ni `Inter-Governmental Organisation' ambayo wanachama wake ni
nchi za Kiislam. G
(iii) Mikutano yake ni ya `Heads of State' na mingine ni ya `Foreign Affairs
Ministers' wa nchi za Kiislamu.
(iv) Madhumuni yake Kimsingi ni ya Kidini na mengine ni ya Kisiasa.
Article II Ibara ya 1 lengo ni `to promote Islamic Solidarity among member States'
yanayofuata toka Ibara ya 2 hadi 7 Kidini H na mengine ni ya Kisiasa.
3. Kwa kuzingatia misingi ya malengo na shabaha ya Umoja huu kama Katiba
yao inavyooanisha kwa upande wa Tanzania kuwa mambo ya msingi ya kuzingatia
kabla ya kufikia uamuzi juu ya Zanzibar kujiunga. Kwanza kwa jinsi Muungano
ulivyo Kikatiba, Tanzania ni nchi moja na ni Jamhuri I yha Muungano-One State
and a United Sovereign Republic. Katika hali hiyo:
1996 TLR p235
SAMATTA JK
(i) Ilivyokuwa uanachama wa Umoja huoni wa Dola, itakuwa ni kinyume
cha Katiba kwa sehemu A moja ya Jamhuri kujiunga kama nchi na kuacha nyingine.
(ii) Pili, mambo ya uhusiano na nchi za Nje Kikatiba na Kimazoea ni
mambo yanayoendeshwa Kimuungano (International Relations). B
(iii) Tatu, Siasa na sera ya nchi yetu Tanzania ni kwamba Serikali na Dola
havina dini. Watu wake ndiyo waumini. Hivyo, wakati wote msimamo ni
kutochanganya mambo ya Dola na Dini.
(iv) Kwa siasa yetu jinsi ilivyo, kujiunga na Umoja huo kama Dola inazusha
maswali ya msingi. Mabadiliko ya msimamo kisiasa juu ya Dini na mfumo wa
kuendesha shughuli kwa sehemu C moja ya Tanzania na kuacha nyingine.
4. USHAURI
Kwa kuzingatia mfumo wa siasa ya Tanzania na Katiba yake kama Nchi moja
(One Sovereign State) tangu 1964 na tangu 1969 Umoja huo umekuwepo bila sisi
kujiunga, nashauri: D
(a) Ni kinyume cha Katiba kwa Zanzibar kujiunga Katika Chombo
ambacho wanachama wake ni dola za Kiislamu.
(b) Kama ni mwafaka na imeamuliwa na kukubalika ni Tanzania ndiyo
inaweza kujiunga. Hii ni baada ya kubadili sera na Siasa yetu juu ya Dini na Dola. E
(c) Waziri wa Mambo ya Nje na Ushirkiano wa Kimataifa, naye kwa
maelezo yake haoni ni sawa kufanya hivyo.
--Nakala ya maoni yake imeambatanishwa.
(d) Nakubali ikiwa ni lazima, kama alivyoshauri Waziri wa Mambo ya Nje
kutafuta njia ya kushirikiana katika mikutano ya OIC kwa misingi
waliyowezakufanya nchi ambazo si za F Kiislam ingawa Katiba ya Umoja huo
inataka hivyo (Islamic State).
(e) La busara kama ndiyo linakubaliwa na IOC ni kwa vyombo vya
Waislamu kama vile BAKWATA, BALUKTA NK kujiunga na siyo Dola. Hiyo ndiyo
ingekuwa njia sahihi isiyokiuka Katiba au Siasa ya nchi. Kwa jinsi iliivyoletwa, na
kwa mfumo wa Kikatiba tulio nao sasa na siasa yetu G kwa maoni yangu ni suala
nyeti ambalo uamuzi wake ukifanywa kwa pupa unaweza kutuletea hali ya vuragu.
Nakurejeshea nakala ya Katiba ya OIC.
D Z Lubuva, Mb H
MWANASHERIA MKUU WA SERIKALI'
The plaintiff asserted that on December 17, 1992 the Hon Hassan Diria, the then
Minister for Foreign Affairs and International Co-operation, admitted at a press
conference that Zanzibar had joined the OIC. The plaintiff did not, however, say that
he I was present at the press conference. When cross-examined by Mr Mwidunda,
he
1996 TLR p236
SAMATTA JK
said that he came to learn that Zanzibar had joined the OIC when he read several A
newspapers, including Motomoto and Daily News. No copy of the constitution of the
OIC was produced before me. It is not disputed that the National Assembly of the
United Republic formed a committee to probe Zanzibar's alleged membership of the
OIC and B that that Committee's report was debated in the House. Essentially, this
was the evidence laid before me. At the commencement of the trial the following
issues were framed:
1. Whether Zanzibar joined the OIC.
C 2. If the answer to the first issue is in the affirmative, was that action
contrary to the provisions of s 1, 8(2), 19(2), 26(1) and 42(5) or any other provision of
the Constitution the United Republic of Tanzania?
3. Did President Ali Hassan Mwinyi allow Zanzibar to join the OIC or did
he in any way facilitate that step being taken? D
4. If the answer to Issue No 3 is in the negative, did President Ali Hassan
Mwinyi condone Zanzibar's act of joining the OIC and, if he did, did that constitute a
violation of any provision of the Constitution of the United Republic?
E 5. Did President Ali Hassan Mwinyi omit to take remedial steps after
Zanzibar joined the OIC? If the answer to question is in the affirmative, did the
omission constitute a violation of any provision of the constitution of the United
Republic?
6. If President Ali Hassan Mwinyi violated the Constitution of the United
Republic F as alleged, do any or more of those violations make him unfit to continue
occupying the office of President of the United Republic?
7. What reliefs, if any, are the parties entitled to? As already pointed out,
at the close of the plaintiff's case Mr Mwidunda submitted that the plaintiff had made
G out no case. The learned Senior State Attorney invited me to dismiss the case at
that stage. The plaintiff, who, as already remarked, appeared in person, contended
that the defendant has a case to answer. Mr Mwidunda contended, inter alia, that to
establish a case to answer against the defendant the plaintiff H had to give or adduce
evidence concerning, inter alia, what the OIC is, its objectives and juridical nature.
According to the learned Senior State Attorney, the contents of Exhibits P1, P2 and
P3 do not in any way support the averment that Zanzibar joined the OIC. Those
letters, Mr Mwidunda submits, were no I more than `consultative correspondence'.
The plaintiff, on the other hand,
1996 TLR p237
SAMATTA JK
submits that, to use his own words, "the fact that Zanzibar joined the
OIC is a A fact of common knowledge for non-issues cannot occupy the
Government and the parliament of the United Republic of Tanzania".
Can a defendant, at the close of a plaintiff's case submit in law that there is no case to
B answer? Eighteen years ago, in Daikin Air Conditioning (EA) Ltd v Harvard
University (1), I ventured to answer that question in the affirmative. I adhere to that
view. A submission of no case to answer in a civil case stands on the same footing as a
C submission of no case to answer in a criminal case, save that there is a difference in
the standard of proof. What, then, is the test to be applied when such a submission is
made? As I understand the law, when the dismissal of the plaintiff's case on the basis
that no case has been made out is prayed for, the court should not ask itself whether
the D evidence given and/or adduced by the plaintiff establishes what would finally
be required to be established, but whether there is evidence upon which a court,
applying its mind reasonably to such evidence, could or might (not should nor ought
to) find for the plaintiff. The submission of no case to answer cannot be upheld if
there is sufficient E evidence on record on which a court might make a reasonable
mistake and enter a judgment for the plaintiff. Whereas the test to be applied at the
close of the defendant's case is what ought a reasonable court to do?, the one to be
applied in determining the validity or otherwise of a submission of no case to answer
is what might a reasonable F court do?: See Supreme Service Station (1969) (Pvt) Ltd
v Fox and Goodridge (Pvt) Ltd (2). The latter test I have described is the one I must
apply in determining Mr Mwidunda's submission in the matter now before me.
It is a general rule of law that all facts in issue and relevant facts must be established
by G evidence, either oral or documentary. There are two exceptions to this rule: (1)
facts judicially noticeable under s 59 of the Evidence Act, 1967 (the Act); and (2) facts
admitted. Since the averment that Zanzibar has joined the OIC is not admitted by the
H defendant, there is onus on the plaintiff to establish that fact to the degree required
by law. Has he succeeded to do so? My answer is no. While there may exist a general
belief among members of the public in the country that Zanzibar joined the
organisation, that belief cannot in law constitute the basis for holding that the
plaintiff has discharged his onus in this case. The general belief does not authorise a
court of law to take judicial I notice of the
1996 TLR p238
SAMATTA JK
alleged fact under s 59 of the Act. The plaintiff had to place before this Court
evidence A which demonstrated, to the degree I have endeavoured to explain, that
Zanzibar did become a member of the OIC or from which that conclusion could
reasonably be drawn. I have sympathetically examined the evidence laid before me
and in the end I am of the B clear opinion that the plaintiff's evidence does not even
begin to establish Zanzibar's membership of the OIC. The plaintiff has not, strangely,
produced before this Court a copy of the constitution of the organisation. It is difficult
to see how he believed that this Court could hold that Zanzibar became a member of
the organisation without examining C the organisation's constitution. Be that as it
may, the contents of Exh P1, P2 and P3 do not, in my considered opinion, establish a
prima facie case that Zanzibar joined the organisation. Those letters reveal no more
than the Government's efforts to find out whether Zanzibar joining the organisation
would be constitutional. In my settled opinion, D there is no basis for acceding to
the plaintiff's contention that he has made out a case on the first issue.
But assuming I am wrong in so holding, I ask myself whether there is enough
evidence before this Court authorising me to call upon the defendant to answer the
plaintiff's case E insofar as the third, fourth and fifth issues are concerned? Here, too,
I have examined the evidence on record with much sympathy but in the end I feel
compelled to answer the question in the negative. There is, in my opinion, no
admissible evidence which reveals the role which the President played in Zanzibar
joining the OIC, assuming she F did. The evidence which the plaintiff though
established the President's role-radio and newspaper reports-is nothing but heresay
evidence. Under s 62 of the Act that evidence was clearly inadmissible to establish the
alleged role. At best, the plaintiff's evidence on G the third, fourth and fifth issues is
speculative. A court of law cannot, even at the stage which the case before me has
reached, make a finding on the basis of such evidence. The documentary evidence
laid before me is not at all helpful to the plaintiff on the three issues.
For the reasons I have given, I am of opinion that Mr Mwidunda's submission that the
H defendant has no case to answer must be upheld. Having reached that conclusion, I
do not find it necessary to deal with Mr Mwidunda's other arguments concerning
limits of this Court's power to give declaratory judgments.
The suit is dismissed with costs. I
1996 TLR p239
A
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