JOHN NDUNGURU RUDOWIKI v REPUBLIC 1991 TLR 102 (CA)
Court Court of Appeal of Tanzania - Dar Es Salaam
Judge Makame JJA and Kisanga JJA and Mapigano Ag JA
C 18th August, 1991
Flynote
D Criminal Law - Murder - Provocation - Defence of provocation by a threat to kill
by witchcraft.
-Headnote
In a trial for murder, the trial judge held that as the appellant had previously heard
confessions by the deceased of having killed his victims by witchcraft, the threat by
the deceased to cause death of the appellant by witchcraft did E not come as a shock
and never put the appellant in fear of any danger to his life or that of his brother
when he killed the deceased. On appeal, the justices of appeal found that on previous
occasions when the deceased admitted to have killed people by witchcraft he had
made no threats to the appellant and thus on the day of the incident the F deceased's
threat to kill him was sudden and must have come to him as a shock. Accordingly
they quashed the conviction for murder and substituted therefore conviction for
manslaughter.
G Held: Although mere belief in witchcraft is no defence to a charge of murder, a
threat to kill by witchcraft may in certain circumstances constitute legal defence to
that charge.
Case Information
Order accordingly.
H Cases referred to.
1. Yovan v Uganda [1970] E.A. 405.
2. Eria Galikuwa v R. [1959] 18 E.A.C.A. 175.
I E.D. Kisusi for the appellant.
1991 TLR p103
KISANGA AND MAKAME JJA AND MAPIGANO Ag JA
[zJDz]Judgment
Kisanga and Makame, JJ.A. and Mapigano, Ag. J.A.: This is an appeal against
conviction for murder and the A sentence of death passed on the appellant by the
High Court (Kazimoto, J.) sitting at Songea.
The appellant is a grandson of the deceased man. He (the appellant) has a brother
called Danstan who was mentally sick. Both of them were staying together at the
appellant's home. On a number of occasions the appellant had B consulted
witchdoctors who told him that the deceased had killed a number of people in the
family and had caused temporary sterility of his own daughter through witchcraft,
and on being asked the deceased confirmed this. C
On the day of the incident the deceased visited the appellant's home to see Danstan,
the sick grandson. There were different versions of what transpired there between
the appellant and the deceased, but the trial judge found, and rightly so in our view,
that there was an exchange of words between them in the course of which the
deceased D threatened to kill the appellant by witchcraft, following which the
appellant picked up an axe and brutally attacked the deceased with it causing his
death instantly.
The appellant's defence was one of provocation through witchcraft, but the trial
Court rejected it and convicted him for murder as charged, Mr. Kisusi, the learned
advocate, who represented the appellant in this Court, filed a total of E eight
grounds of appeal. Essentially his complaint is that the appellant's defence was
refused on insufficient grounds.
In dealing with the matter before him the learned trial judge properly directed
himself that although mere belief in F witchcraft is no defence to a charge of
murder, a threat to kill by witchcraft may in certain circumstances constitute legal
defence to that charge and for that view he relied on the decision of the court of
Appeal for Eastern Africa in Yovan v Uganda [1970] E.A. 405. He specifically
referred to the following passage in that judgment: G
In considering this case the trial judge to a large extent relied on the principles
relating to provocation as explained by this Court in the case of Eria Galikuwa v R
[1951] 18 E.A.C.A. 175 and, having held that the substantive act of provocation here
H was a threat to cause the appellant's death, said, following that decision, that "a
threat to cause death cannot be considered as a physical provocative act". With
respect we are of the view that the decision in the Galikuwa case should not be
regarded I as laying down a general rule but must be interpreted
1991 TLR p104
KISANGA AND MAKAME JJA AND MAPIGANO Ag JA
A with reference to the facts of that case. There may be cases where a threat to
kill taken with the other existing circumstances could amount to legal provocation.
B The facts in that case were that the appellant had suspected the deceased, his step
mother, of having killed his two children by witchcraft or poison. On his blaming
her, she retorted that he (the appellant) would also die before he could bury the
children. Whereupon the appellant attacked her by cutting her with a panga causing
her death C instantly. In considering the appellant's defence of provocation the
Court said:
This is a difficult case because the act of the deceased in threatening to cause
the death of the appellant, presumably by D witchcraft, must be viewed not in
isolation but in the context of the appellant's children having just died, the appellant
honestly believing the deceased to have been responsible for their deaths, and the
deceased knowing of this belief. We are unable to say that the uttering of such
threats by the deceased, in these circumstances, could never constitute a wrongful act
and thus E legal provocation.
The Court, however, found that the killing was pre-meditated because the appellant,
when he armed himself with a panga and went to the deceased's house, intended to
kill her.
F In the instant case the trial judge found that the appellant killed the deceased in
revenge for the past deaths and misfortune he had caused to member of the family.
In his view there was nothing sudden in the threat uttered by the deceased to the
appellant because prior to the day of the incident the appellant had heard the
deceased confessing G to have caused deaths and misfortune to members of the
family. His reasoning comes out rather clearly in the following passage of his
judgment:
H The accused was no stranger to the deceased. Since 1980 he had been taking
the deceased to witchdoctors who told him that the deceased had caused death by
witchcraft and the deceased was alleged to have admitted killing his victims by
witchcraft in order to pay or reduce debts. The accused had been hearing these
confessions. It was not sudden when the I accused heard the alleged threat that he
wanted to kill accused or Danstan in order to reduce debts. ... ... As the threat to
1991 TLR p105
KISANGA AND MAKAME JJA AND MAPIGANO Ag JA
cause death did not come as a shock I hold that the accused was not put in fear
of any danger to his life or that of his brother A when he killed the deceased.
With due respect the learned judge misdirected himself on some material point here.
There was no evidence that the B deceased had in the past threatened to kill the
appellant. The evidence merely shows that the appellant had heard the deceased
confessing to have caused deaths and misfortune to some family members, but there is
no suggestion that prior to the day of the incident the deceased had threatened to kill
the appellant. As far as the appellant is C concerned, therefore, the deceased's threat
to kill him on the day of the incident was sudden and must have come to him as a
shock. Such a sudden threat has to be viewed in the context of the deceased's
previous admissions, in the appellant's presence, to have caused deaths and
misfortune to some family members, and the appellant's honest belief in his having
the power to do so. Had the learned judge directed himself on these lines we are
unable to say D for certain that he would have necessarily come to the same
conclusion.
In this respect it is perhaps pertinent to point out here that in killing the deceased the
appellant did not follow the deceased; rather it was the deceased who had gone to the
appellant's home, and that would tend to incline more to E the view that the killing
was in circumstances of provocation rather than premeditation.
The learned judge went to say that even if the killing was in the circumstances of
provocation, he would have found F that there was sufficient time for the appellant's
passion to cool because the appellant went to the kitchen, some 23 feet away, where
he picked the axe with which he killed the deceased. Mr Kisusi complains that the
finding that the kitchen was 23 feet away was not supported by the evidence. This
complaint is justified. We could find nothing G in the evidence showing or
indicating the distance between the kitchen and the place where the threat was
uttered. On the other hand our impression of the evidence is that the kitchen was in
the vicinity and that the appellant simply entered there and picked the axe. Even
assuming for the sake of argument that the distance of 23 feet was H established on
the evidence, such a distance, in our view, was too short and could not provide time
for the appellant's passion to cool.
In all the circumstances of the case we are not satisfied that the charge of murder was
proved beyond reasonable I doubt. As we have made it abundantly clear, we are
increasingly of the view that
1991 TLR p106
A had the learned trial judge properly directed himself as shown above,
he might well have come to a different conclusion. The appellant is entitled to the
benefit of that doubt. In the result the appellant's conviction for murder is quashed
and the sentence of death set aside. We substitute therefore a conviction for
manslaughter contrary to section 195 of the Penal Code.
B The appellant has been in custody since 1989, but the killing which was really
brutal was rooted in the belief of witchcraft which ought to be discouraged. This was
a bad case of manslaughter which came very near murder, and C which calls for a
severe sentence. We think that a sentence of twelve (12) years' imprisonment will
meet the justice of the case. It is ordered accordingly.
Order accordingly.
1991 TLR p106
D
0 Comments
PLACE YOUR COMMENT HERE
WARNING: DO NOT USE ABUSIVE LANGUAGE BECAUSE IT IS AGAINST THE LAW.
THE COMMENTS OF OUR READERS IS NOT OUR RESPONSIBILITY.