REPUBLIC v DAMAS COSMAS NILAHI 1992 TLR 194 (HC)
Court High Court of Tanzania - Dar Es Salaam
Judge Bahati J
10 August, 1992
Flynote
Criminal Practice and Procedure - Appeal - State Attorney withdraws appeal without
B express authority from D.P.P. - D.P.P. applies to restore appeal - Whether Court
functus officio and with what effect.
-Headnote
A state Attorney who was instructed to go to Court and attend an appeal, without C
authority given by the D.P.P. withdrew the appeal from court. The D.P.P. applied to
have the appeal restored. It was considered whether the D.P.P. was duly represented
in Court and whether the Court became functus officio.
Held: (i) I have no hesitation in holding that the D.P.P. was duly represented in the
D appeal and that the D.P.P. withdrew the appeal;
(ii) although this court is functus officio, it has inherent jurisdiction to declare
the withdrawal a nullity and to restore the appeal; E
(iii) the withdrawal could only be revised if there was a genuine mistake or
fraud;
(iv) there being no mistake or fraud the withdrawal was in order and cannot
be revised. F
Case Information
Application dismissed.
Mr. Mallaba for the applicant
Dr. Lamwai for the respondent. G
[zJDz]Judgment
Bahati, J.: This is an application by the DPP for the restoration of the appeal in this
case which was withdrawn by Mr. Mwengela a State Attorney, on 14/10/91. The
application is supported by an affidavit of Mr. Teemba, a Principal State Attorney in
the Attorney General's Chambers. H
The affidavit avers that Mr. Teemba's duties as a Principal State Attorney include
assigning duties to State Attorneys in the DPP's Department. It goes on to aver that
on 14/10/91 Mr. Teemba instructed Mr. Abdul Mwengela a State Attorney to go to
Court and attend an appeal No. 123/90 filed by the DPP against Damas Cosmas Nilahi.
Mr. I Teemba never gave Mr. Mwengela the
1992 TLR p195
BAHATI J
instructions or authority to go and withdraw the appeal from court on that day. Mr.
A Teemba learnt subsequently from the Commissioner of Customs that the appeal
had been withdrawn from the Court. On 7/11/91 Mr. Teemba and the DPP
summoned Mr. Mwengela who admitted having acted contrary to Mr. Teemba's
instructions. Mr. B Mwengela admitted having withdrawn the appeal on his own
authority and withhelding that fact later. Mr. Mwengela under normal circumstances
ought to have reported back to the DPP or to Mr. Teemba what had transpired in
court. The appeal according to Mr. Teemba has overwhelming chances of success and
is of great public interest. He concluded that justice will only be met (done) to both
parties if the appeal is restored. C
In chambers, Mr. Malaba, learned State Attorney reiterated what is contained in the
affidavit of Mr. Teemba. He said that Mr. Teemba gave Mr. Mwengela instructions to
proceed with the appeal and not to withdraw it. He submitted that by applying to D
withdraw the appeal Mr. Mwengela was acting contrary to the express instructions he
had been given and that it was wrong for him to purport to act for the DPP. He
referred the Court to section 377 of the Criminal Procedure Act which defines the
DPP to include any officer subordinate to the DPP ..... in accordance with his general
or E special instructions. He stated that if a State Attorney has special instructions of
the DPP in relation to a particular matter, he will be acting contrary to the DPP's
authority if he does not comply with the DPP's instructions. He submitted that Mr.
Mwengela admitted to have noted contrary to the instructions of the DPP and that
after the F withdrawal of the appeal, he withheld information to that effect from the
DPP.
In reply, Dr. Lamwai, learned counsel for the respondent, submitted that the main
issue was to what extent is a State Attorney presumed to be able to bind the DPP in
what he does in court. He conceded that Mr. Mwengela was a junior State Attorney
and he G raised 2 fundamental questions namely: (1) Under what law can the High
Court revise its order entered on application of one of the parties to the proceedings.
The other question was not mentioned by Dr. Lamwai who only dealt at length with
the only question H raised. He submitted that there is no law which empowers this
court to restore an appeal which has been withdrawn. He referred to the Criminal
Procedure Act and commented that it talks of restoration of a dismissed appeal and
not a withdrawn appeal. He also submitted that the Court cannot use its inherent
powers and that even I the chamber summons does not seek inherent powers. He
1992 TLR p196
BAHATI J
said further that inherent powers are used to stop an abuse of process of court which
A was not the case here. He also submitted that an order granted on application for
withdrawal of an appeal is a final order and that the court was functus officio and
unable to reverse its decision.
Dr. Lamwai next argued the substance of the application on the basis of the affidavit.
B He said that Mr. Teemba in his affidavit was conceding that Mr. Mwengela was
duly instructed to conduct the appeal which meant that he could either argue the
appeal or withdraw it. He submitted that it cannot be said that Mr. Mwengela did not
conduct the appeal on behalf of the D.P.P. He said that in the absence of specific
instructions to C the contrary the Court should conclude that a State Attorney has
power to proceed with an appeal or terminate it. He said that section 377 of the CPA
was irrelevant because it was only a definition section. He submitted that there
cannot be any dispute that Mr. D Mwengela had general or special instructions to
appear in the appeal and that the DPP was therefore in court, and the DPP decided to
withdraw the appeal. He argued that matters of instructions in the DPP's office are
internal arrangement and that the Court cannot act on such internal arrangements as
if they were law. E
With regard to paragraph 7 of the affidavit, Dr. Lamwai submitted that there was no
evidence that Mr. Mwengela acted contrary to instructions as nothing was produced
to show what the instructions were. He said that only Mr. Mwengela could solve this
riddle F by swearing or an affidavit stating the nature of instructions and admitting
going contrary to such instructions. He said further that to hold otherwise would be
putting Mr. Mwengela on trial without being heard. He prayed that paragraphs 7,8
and 9 be disregarded.
With regard to the question of overwhelming chances of success, Dr. Lamwai said G
that Mr. Teemba wanted to convince the Court to open a Pandora's box in that he
wants the Court to hold that when one State Attorney find that there is no evidence
and the other finds evidence, then the case should be reopen. He submitted further
that the H application amounted to putting the respondent in double jeopardy
because he was acquitted in 1990 and the appeal was withdrawn in 1991 and it was
now in July 1992. He referred to the record of the court which shows that on 25/9/91
an adjournment was sought by the DPP to consider withdrawal of the appeal. He
concluded that there was I no shoddy deal in this matter and that more suspicion
could not help in the administration of justice.
1992 TLR p197
BAHATI J
In reply to the above, Mr. Malaba submitted that there was no law requiring every A
application to be supported by the law under which it is made and that the Court had
inherent powers to deal with any legal matter in issue for the interests of justice.
With regard to the issue of "functus officio", Mr. Mallaba submitted that this applied
only where a matter had been heard on merits. With regards to the affidavit, he said
B that the affidavit is presumed to contain the truth until the contrary is proved by a
counter affidavit or in cross-examination. Dr. Lamwai intervened by stating that the
respondent filed a counter-affidavit. Indeed such counter affidavit is there. C
On the question of section 377 of the CPA Mr. Malaba reiterated that once a State
Attorney fails to comply with specific instructions of the DPP then he cannot be said
to be acting for the DPP and that once the DPP has directed a State Attorney to issue
instructions on his behalf then those instructions are of the DPP. He concluded that if
D a State Attorney decided to go contrary to specific instructions then there is no
DPP in court.
On the issue of 25/9/91, he said that it was Mr. Mwengela who appeared on that day
and he never briefed the DPP of his intention to withdraw the appeal. E
The issues to be determined in this application are interesting and may be
unprecedented. Here is the DPP who has withdrawn the appeal through his State
Attorney asking that the order for withdrawal be revised and the appeal restored
because the State Attorney in question did not have instructions from him to
withdraw F the appeal. In paragraph 4 of his affidavit, Mr. Teemba Principal State
Attorney is saying, "I never gave him the instruction or authority to go and withdraw
the appeal from court on that day." Does a State Attorney require instructions or
authority to withdraw an appeal (or a case for that matter) in order for his withdrawal
to be effective in law G when acted upon by the Court by making the appeal
withdrawn? Mind you, Mr. Teemba is not saying, "I gave him instructions not to
withdraw the appeal." From paragraph 4 of the affidavit it is clear that there were no
instructions to withdraw the appeal or not to withdraw the appeal. From the reading
of paragraph 3 of the I affidavit, it is also clear that the only instructions there were
to Mr. Mwengela from Mr. Teemba were to go to court and attend an appeal No.
123/90 which is the case in question; there were therefore no specific instructions not
to withdraw the appeal. Therefore, with respect to Mr. Mallaba, learned State
Attorney, his submission to the effect that Mr. Teemba instructed Mr. Mwengela
1992 TLR p198
BAHATI J
not to withdraw the appeal is not supported by anything in the affidavit. The A
instructions were to go to Court and attend an appeal (the appeal No.1 23/90.
Whereas in paragraph 4 of the affidavit Mr. Teemba avers that he never gave Mr.
Mwengela instructions or authority to go and withdraw the appeal from the court on
that day, it is B also correct to say that Mr. Teemba never gave instructions not to
withdraw the appeal to Mr. Mwengela. On the basis of the above, it cannot be said, as
Mr. Malaba has submitted, that Mr. Mwengela was acting contrary to express
instructions which he has been given and hence not representing the DPP. The fact
that Mr. Mwengela did not C report to the DPP that he had withdrawn the appeal
cannot alter anything, because, as submitted by Dr. Lamwai, that would be internal
arrangements in the DPP's office. I have no hesitation in holding that the DPP was
duly represented in the appeal and that the DPP withdrew the appeal. I also agree
with Dr. Lamwai that it would be wrong for D this court to hold that Mr. Mwengela
admitted to have acted contrary to instructions of Mr. Teemba without giving Mr.
Mwengela the right to be heard because such a finding would be prejudicial to him.
Paragraphs 7 and 8 of the affidavit of Mr. Teemba are charging Mr. Mwengela with a
serious infraction of regulations and as such these E paragraphs are controversial.
This court can only act on them if Mr. Mwengela himself confirmed the truth of
these paragraphs. Indeed if these paragraphs are true then he would have expected
either an admission in writing or an affidavit from Mr. Mwengela himself. Short of
that I am not prepared to accept them at their face value. This court F has the duty
to scrutinize what is in the affidavit or any evidence and it cannot take for granted or
presume that an affidavit is true even if there is nothing to challenge it in writing.
There is the point raised by Dr. Lamwai concerning the power of the court to revise
an G order entered in circumstances such as the present. Dr. Lamwai has argued that
the court is functus officio in such a situation. Mr. Mallaba on the other hand has
argued that the court has inherent powers to entertain any matter when the interests
of justice so require and that the court become functus officio only when a matter has
been determined on merits. H
After diligent search for a case in point, I have come upon a Ugandan case of Scrisito
Luyombya v Uganda [1965] EA 618. This case concerned a notice of abandonment of
an appeal given under section 328 A(3) of the Uganda Criminal Procedure Code. The
appellant made an application for leave to withdraw the notice of abandonment I
although there were no provisions in the Criminal
1992 TLR p199
BAHATI J
Procedure Code to that effect. The Chief Justice dismissed the application as A
incompetent on the ground that the appeal was already deemed to have been
dismissed by operation of law under S.328A (3) and the Court was functus officio. On
appeal to the Court of Appeal for the East Africa it was held that:
B (i) the appellate courts in Uganda have an inherent jurisdiction to allow an
abandoned appeal to be restored, if it can be shown that the notice of abandonment
was given by mistake or fraud such as to involve a possible failure of justice in the
event of the appeal not being restored; C
(ii) an application to withdraw notice of abandonment is not necessarily an
abuse of legal process, because there may be cases in which, although functus officio,
an appellate D tribunal will use its inherent jurisdiction to declare such notice a
nullity, and allow the appeal to be restored.
The matter was remitted to the High Court to hear the application on its merits. E
Since the above case is from Uganda, it is only of persuasive authority although it is a
Court of Appeal decision. However, I entirely agree with the decision arrived at
which can be applied even in the case before me. Going by the above cited case, I
hold that although this court is functus officio, it has inherent jurisdiction to declare
the F withdrawal a nullity and to restore the appeal. I cannot see why the position in
Tanzania should be different from that in Uganda on this issue.
I will therefore examine now whether there is any justification for declaring the
application for withdrawal or the withdrawal itself a nullity in this case. G
One thing is clear in this case, and it is that the withdrawal of the appeal by the State
Attorney Mr. Mwengela was not expected by the DPP nor was it wanted or desired
by the DPP. the withdrawal was certainly not by mistake. Was it fraudulent? There is
no H evidence that it was fraudulent. I have already ruled above that the
controversial parts of the affidavit which purport to charge Mr. Mwengela with an
infraction of the regulations cannot be accepted without more because that would
amount to condemning Mr. Mwengela without giving him a hearing. Therefore we
go to the next and possible the I last question in this matter which is whether
1992 TLR p200
Mr. Mwengela had power to withdraw the appeal from the court. My answer to this
A question is in the affirmative because Mr. Mwengela as State Attorney duly
representing the DPP had power to do what was within his power when he appeared
in the Court. The withdrawal of the appeal was a matter within his powers. That the
DPP did not like B the step taken buy Mr. Mwengela cannot mean that Mr.
Mwengela had no such power.
It follows therefore that the withdrawal was in order and the appeal is deemed to
have been duly dismissed. It could only be revised if there was a genuine mistake or
fraud which is not the case here. C
I agree with Dr. Lamwai that this application should be dismissed. I dismiss it
accordingly.
D Appeal dismissed.
1992 TLR p200
E
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