ELIAS JOAKIM v REPUBLIC 1992 TLR 220 (HC)
Court High Court of Tanzania - Tabora
Judge Katiti J
19 August 1992 F
Flynote
Evidence - Testimony by children of tender years - Voire dire test - s. 127(5)
Evidence Act 1967.
Criminal Practice and Procedure - Sentencing - Accused found guilty on two counts -
Criminal Procedure Act 1985.
Criminal Practice and Procedure - Sentencing - Accused currently serving another G
sentence.
Criminal Practice and Procedure - Sentencing - Offence committed falls under the
Minimum Sentences Act 1972.
-Headnote
Elias Joakim, the appellant was charged and prosecuted before Shinyanga District H
Court of two counts - house breaking c/s 294 (1) and stealing c/s 267 of the Penal
Code. The appellant was found guilty and sentenced to 2 years' imprisonment on the
first count, far below the minimum mandatory sentence prescribed by the Minimum
Sentences Act 1972. On the second count the appellant was condemned to 5 years' I
imprisonment, without the trial
1992 TLR p221
KATITI J
Magistrate ordering the same to run, either, concurrently or consecutively. The A
convictions were procured basically on evidence tendered by children of tender
years.
In mitigation it also transpired that the appellant was serving another sentence.
Aggrieved with the conviction and sentence the appellant appealed. B
Held: (i) Competency in giving evidence in so far as the child of tender years is
concerned, is not a matter of age, but of understanding;
C (ii) where a child of tender years gives evidence sworn after a successful voire
dire test, and that he understands the nature of the oath, his evidence so given is as
good as that of an adult;
(iii) it is trite law, under the Minimum Sentences Act, 1972, Section 5, that
where the value of the property obtained during the commission of the scheduled
offence exceeds shillings five thousand, the minimum sentence imposable is five years
D imprisonment;
(iv) it is judicial practice that where in an indictment consisting of several or
many counts, that have attracted convictions, the sentence imposed and assigned to
each count shall be ordered to run concurrently, if such related offences arose out of a
E single transaction, or are part and parcel of a single plan.
Case Information
Appeal dismissed. F
Osward, for the respondent.
[zJDz]Judgment
Katiti, J.: Indicted and prosecuted, before Shinyanga District Court was Elias s/o
Joakim, herein to be called the appellant, facing two counts - House breaking c/s 294
(1) of the Penal Code - and Stealing c/s 265 of the Penal Code Cap. 16. At the end G
of the day, the appellant, was found guilty and convicted, as charged and sentenced to
two years imprisonment on first count, and five years imprisonment on 2nd count,
without ordering the same to run, either, concurrently, or consecutively. However,
the H Public Prosecutor, before the above sentence, told the court, that the
Appellant had previous convictions - store breaking and stealing c/s 296 (1) of the
Penal Code Cap. 16 - Criminal Case No. 94/89, and the appellant in mitigation prayed
as follows: I
1992 TLR p222
KATITI J
A I pray for leniency. I pray that, my other sentence I am currently serving, be
considered in sentencing me. This is all.
The trial and sentencing magistrate, directed as follows: B
It is further ordered, that as a 2nd offender, and because he was sentenced to
six years imprisonment, in the previous conviction, these sentences shall be served
consecutively, the resultant effect, being he shall serve a total of seven (7) years
imprisonment. C
The appellant aggrieved, has appealed against conviction, contending that the quality
and quantity of the evidence, at hand, did not prove the charge preferred beyond
reasonable doubt. While the sufficiency and quality of evidence is to be tested, too, to
D be visited is the aspect of sentence, that was meted out, or should have been meted
out, to the appellant.
The facts of the case, significantly speak for themselves thus. On the morning of
18/7/1989, PW.1 Justina d/o Mazinge, left for work after locking her house. When E
she came back at 5 p.m., same day, she was welcomed back by the doors, that were
open and ajar. Her count of her properties, disclosed that properties including glasses,
plates, spoons, electric iron, handbag, etc. valued at shs 23,885/=, had been stolen
therefrom.
The obvious question was, and now, is who broke into this house, and stole. The F
Prosecutor, produced PW.2 Zacharia s/o Maganga and PW.4 Kelvin s/o Lumbeli, both
aged twelve and seven years of age, respectively, and who after a successful voire dire
test, gave evidence on oath. PW.3 Zacharia s/o Maganga, narrating how he saw the G
appellant entering the complainants house, at about 2 p.m. has this to say:
The accused that day, came and called Kelvin, who he sent for cigarettes. He
gave him money. Kelvin went for cigarettes. When he left, I saw the accused enter
Justina's house H by the door leading to the annex rooms. He went and kept for
long. About 1/2 an hour, later on, I saw him come out carrying sack full of things, on
his shoulders. He came to the place I was, put his luggage down and told me, that, I
should tell Kelvin, to keep cigarettes I he had sent for, as he was in hurry, and he
could collect them, after he sent his luggage. He wanted to
1992 TLR p223
KATITI J
A take his luggage and go. I told him, see Kelvin was coming from afar.
It is not timely and opportune at this juncture, to hear from PW.4 Kelvin s/o Lumbeli,
who picks therefrom, and tells us thus:
B Sometime last week, I remember I saw Elias pass with an empty sack. He went
to the direction of the machine. He later came again, and stopped where we had been
playing. He stopped there, and asked me to go for cigarettes. When I came back, I
found him with a sack, which now was no longer empty, but full of things. When he
saw me from a C distance, he put it on the ground, and came running for the
cigarettes before he went back for his luggage and he hurriedly vanished away with
it.
With this and such evidence, was the defence that, the appellant was at 2 p.m. with
D DW.3 Mama Dina, who had invited him for food. However DW.3 while
conceding, the appellant went to her, she denied she had invited him for food, and
added that he only stayed there, for two minutes. The appellant also added, he had
been attending E meeting at the oil mill, which DW.4 Yusufu Leonard the oil mill
chief clerk discounted, saying that, the appellant had been sacked as an employee
long before 18/7/1989, and could not therefore attend any meeting, and that in any
case, there was no such meeting, on that day at all. F
With such evidence, the trial court found PW.2 and PW.4 credible, establishing that
it was the appellant, who broke into the complainants dwelling house, and stole, and
hence the conviction. The appellant is complainingly attacking the trial Magistrate,
for relying on the evidence of children of tender years - PW.2 and PW.4 to convict
him. G The appellant seeks, that the evidence by PW.2 Zacharia s/o Maganga and
PW.4 Kelvin s/o Lumbeli, be discounted because of their tender ages.
With a lot of respect, what we wish is not always the right thing, or even legal -
wishes are not horse rides. The course of action, that has to be taken, as and when a
child of H tender years (child of, or, below the apparent age of fourteen years, - see
Section 127 (5) of the Evidence Act) has to give evidence, is not just wished, but
dictated by Section 127 (2) of the Evidence Act 1967. That is, under the above
subsection, a child of tender years may be sworn, if he understands the nature of oath,
or may give evidence I unsworn,
1992 TLR p224
KATITI J
if he has sufficient intelligence, and understands the duty of telling the truth, so that
it A should in my view follow that, competency in so far as the child of tender years,
is concerned, is not a matter of age, but of understanding. And to crown it all, the
appellant is worth learning, that the trial Court, may even competently rely on the
testimony by a child of tender years, when such child of tender years, has given such
B testimony on the side of the prosecution, to convict the accused person, if it is fully
satisfied, that the child is telling nothing but the truth, and has warned itself, of the
danger of acting on such evidence, in the absence of corroboration. And where a child
of tender years, gives evidence sworn after a successful voire dire test, and that he C
understands the nature of oath, his evidence so given, is as good as that of an adult,
and it is treated that way, and such evidence may only require corroboration, if it is
accomplice evidence, or is such evidence which as a matter of practice or requirement
of law, corroboration is necessary. D
In this case, PW.2 Zacharia Maganga and PW.4 Kelvin s/ Lumbeli, gave evidence
sworn, after a successful voire dire test, that, they knew the nature of oath, and each
ones evidence, is as good as that of any adult. If, Justina d/o Mazinge left her house
locked, and she came back and found broken into, and goods stolen, and if PW.2 E
saw the appellant entering and later coming out with a sack full of things, a sack that
was also seen by PW.4, with the appellant's alibi that he had been at the meeting, and
or that he had been invited by Mama Dina all denied, and smashed by the appellant's
witnesses, the conclusion reached by the trial Magistrate, that it was the appellant
who F broke into the house, and stole, is as sound as granite, and gives no room for
successful attack. In the final analysis, the convictions on both counts, are upheld.
The last point, to be dealt with in this case, is the aspect of sentence. The trial court,
G imposed two years imprisonment, on first count, and five years imprisonment on
2nd count - no more, no less. But there followed another order, that the sentence of
six years imprisonment, the appellant was serving upon previous conviction, run
consecutively with the above sentence, according to the trial court. "the resultant H
effect being, he shall serve a total of seven years imprisonment." May I say, with
attendant due respect, that the above is provokingly attracting comments - first - on
the legality of sentence on first count - two - the trial magistrate failure to show
whether such sentences shall run concurrently or consecutively with the sentence on
second count, and - three - the propriety of ordering sentences based on separate
indictments I and trials, to run
1992 TLR p225
KATITI J
consecutively, and - 4 - the arithmetical or additional accuracy. I shall hereunder deal
A with each, of the above aspects.
The legality, or illegality, of sentence on the first count cannot pass without
corrective comment. It is trite law, under the Minimum Sentences Act. 1972, section
5 that where the value of property obtained during the commission of the scheduled
offence, (1st B schedule), exceeds five thousand shillings, the minimum sentence
imposable, is five years imprisonment. In this case, the appellant stole property worth
Shs. 23,885/=. Similarly, where the accused has a previously been convicted of
scheduled offence, in the proceeding five years as the appellant had been, (store -
breaking and stealing Cr. C Case No. 94/89) and is subsequently convicted of another
scheduled offence, the minimum sentence imposable, is five years imprisonment. It
would seem to me, that the appellant was legally and sentence wise, cornered, with
neither front, nor rear, through which to escape, the Minimum sentence of five years
imprisonment. The illegal D sentence of two years imprisonment is therefore set
aside, and five years imprisonment imposed, instead.
Again, the trial Magistrate had left the sentences, on counts (1) and (2) hanging, may
be in the parlance, of Section 36 of the Penal Code Cap. 16 "the same to be executed
E after the expiration of the former sentence, unless the Court directs, that, it shall be
executed concurrently, with the former sentence, or any part thereof, they were to be
presumed run consecutively - See Ali Mohamed v R. [1968] HCD No. 63. But the
judicial approach has been that, where in an indictment consisting of several, or many
counts, the trial court convicts the accused on such several or many counts, it has to
F impose and assign each count, that attracted conviction, a separate sentence, and
shall indicate therein, whether the sentences are to run concurrently, or
consecutively, and not leave them hanging. As it was pertinently observed by the
Court of Appeal in the case G of Hussein T. Kabeka and Others [1980] T.L.R. 267 -
"A sentencing Court will never go wrong, if on deciding to pass concurrent terms of
imprisonment, on an offender, it inflicts sentence on each offence and then directs
the sentence so passed to run concurrently, and no more." H
When to decide whether a concurrent, or consecutive sentence, should be imposed is
in my view not a gordian know it is not with respect, an inextricable difficulty. The
judicial view and approach, on when concurrent sentences, should be ordered, is
abundantly and oversupplied in the case law. Citing a few examples, will be as
graphic, as will I suffice in my view. In the case of Musa s/o Bakari
1992 TLR p226
KATITI J
v R. [1968] H.C.D. No. 239, it was held that, it was universal practice, in the A
absence of good reason to the contrary, to order the sentence for related offences, of
house breaking and stealing, to run concurrently, or where the charged counts,
attracting convictions, arose out of single transaction, or are part and parcel of the
same transaction, or are part and parcel of single plan of campaign concurrent
sentences B will be ordered - see Jayantilar Laiji Kara Shah v R. [1968] H.C.D. No.
328, Ray Raphael Lameck v R. [1967] H.C.D. 190 27 and Joseph A. Kashamakula v R.
[1970] H.C.D. No. 201, Just to mention a few. Thus, it is the judicial approach, that
where in an indictment, consisting several or many counts, that have attracted C
convictions, the sentence imposed and assigned to each count, shall be ordered to run
concurrently, if such charged offences are related, arose but of single transaction, or
are part and parcel of a single plan. That is, without rule, or order, to the contrary, a
good working rule is that consecutive sentences, should not be passed for offences
arising D out of the same transaction, as the sum total sentence resulting therefrom,
may often prove to be too great considering the circumstances of the case. - See R. v
Kaktercum [1972] 56 Cr. App. R. 298. In this case, house - breaking and stealing, are
so related, and interconnected operationally, that the sentences should have been
ordered to run E concurrently. For obvious reasons therefore, I hereby confirm the
sentence on 2nd count, and further order, that the sentences on the two counts, shall
run concurrently.
And finally, I verily confess, that I would at this juncture have rested in peace, if it F
were not for the trial Magistrate order, that the previous sentence of six years earned,
in a different trial, run consecutively, with the present sentence, which is five years
imprison, but computing it have the "effect of being, he shall serve a total of seven G
(7) years imprisonment". I come, to this aspect, not because the order was made, and
it had to be made in view of the appellants prayers for judicial intervention, otherwise
the command by the provisions of section 36 of the Penal Code take its course, but
more, I come in because, if as the trial Magistrate ordered, the sentences imposed in
H different trials, should indeed be served, consecutively, in the parlance of section
36 of the Penal Code - each sentence to be executed after the expiration of the former
sentence they add up to eleven years imprisonment. As I understand, consecutive
sentences are accumulative, one sentence being served after the other, - they add up I
arithmetically. If this be so and I am convicted it is, six years imprisonment earned in
the previous trial,
1992 TLR p227
and five years imprisonment earned in this case, served consecutively can only A
add-up to eleven years imprisonment, and not seven years imprisonment, as the trial
Magistrate erroneously added up. With the correction, the appellant shall serve the
two sentence consecutively - eleven years imprisonment. The appeal is dismissed,
convictions and sentences upheld. B
Appeal dismissed.
1992 TLR p227
C
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