SIMON ELINA MBAGA & ANOTHER v REPUBLIC 1991 TLR 138 (HC)
Court Court of Appeal of Tanzania - Arusha
Judge Nchalla J
2nd October, 1991
Flynote
Criminal Practice and Procedure - Sentencing - Armed robbery - Sentence of fifteen
years imprisonment illegal - I Sentence of not less than thirty years imprisonment
mandatory.
1991 TLR p139
NCHALLA J
In trial for armed robbery the trial magistrate convicted the appellants and sentenced
them to fifteen years A imprisonment, ordered them to pay compensation for
injuries to the victim, and to make good the items stolen. The Judge, on appeal found
that the conviction was proper but found the sentence of fifteen years imprisonment
to be illegal. B
Held: The sentence of fifteen years imprisonment imposed by the trial court was
inadequate and in disregard to the mandatory provisions of section 5(b) of the
Minimum Sentences Act, 1972 as amended by Act No. 10 of 1989, and therefore,
illegal. C
Case Information
Appeal dismissed.
[zJDz]Judgment
Nchalla, J.: Simon Elina Mbaga filed to this court Cr. Appeal No. 75/91, while Sifuni
Said Ernest filed Cr. Appeal No. 76/91. Both appeals arise from the decision of
Mwanga District court in its original criminal case no 203/90 in D which both
appellants were jointly charged with armed robbery c/ss 285 and 286 of the Penal
Code, Cap. 16 whereupon they were convicted of that offence, and were then each
sentenced to 15 years imprisonment. They E were also ordered to pay 1000/=
compensation each for the injuries P.W.1 sustained at the hand of the appellants. The
appellants were further ordered to make good the items they robbed from the
complainant a description of which is aptly given in the charge sheet.
The appellants are appealing against conviction, sentence and the order of
compensation. Both appellants did not F wish to be present at the hearing of their
appeals, and they did not engage counsel to represent them on appeal. So, the appeal
have been heard in the absence of the appellants.
As the two appeals arise from one and the same original case, it was ordered that the
same be consolidated and that G they be heard together. The two appeals have
therefore been heard in consolidation.
I will refer to the appellants' grounds of appeal in general not seriatim. The
appellants argued that the evidence of H P.W. 1 and P.V.7 is contradictory.
They argued that while P.W.1 said that her children escaped from the house through
the window, P.W.7 the daughter of P.W.1 said that she escaped through the rear door
of their house. The appellants further urged that I P.W.1 the victim of the robbery
in this case could not have properly identified her assailants as she said
1991 TLR p140
NCHALLA J
A that she fell unconscious when she was cut with a panga. The appellants further
urged that the evidence of P.W.4 and P.W. 6, who claim to have seen the appellants
near the house of P.W. 1 after P.W.1 had been attacked and had been taken to
hospital, is not credible and the same is contradictory. Simon Elina Mbaga (whom I
will B hereinafter refer to as the first appellant) argued that the evidence by P.W.4
that he cut him (appellant) with a panga at the scene on the material night is not
established, as P.W.4 did not identify the person whom he claims to have cut with a
panga right at the scene after P.W.1 was attacked. Moreover, the first appellant
charged that the description C of the shirt, which it is alleged the first appellant
wore on the material night and place, is different from the description of that shirt
given by P.W.1, P.W. 3 and P.W.7. P.W.4 said it was a T-Shirts, while the other D
prosecution witnesses said it was a white shirt. "This is a marked contradiction", first
accused urged.
As to the evidence of P.W. 3, the appellants urged that evidence is not true. The
appellants queried why P.W.3 did not identify in court the panga which it is alleged
the appellants borrowed from her on the night in question, and E which it is alleged
the appellants used in attacking P.W.1 and that the same was recovered from the
house of the first appellant.
Mrs. Lyimo, learned State Attorney, gave a reply in support of the appeals. She
submitted that the issue of identification of the appellants by P.W.1 and P.W. 7 at the
scene during the alleged robbery was not resolved. Mrs F Lyimo urged that P.W.1
was too frightened to be able to identify her assailants.
After a close scrutiny of the evidence on record which evidence, I admit, was
inelegantly recorded, and after a careful consideration of the trial Magistrate's
evaluation and assessment of the available evidence and his reasoning G and findings
on that evidence, I am unable to agree with Mrs Lyimo and the appellants that the
trial Magistrate arrived at a wrong conclusion in this case. I am highly satisfied that
the trial Magistrate properly considered the H evidence and also properly directed
himself on that evidence and the law relevant thereto and ultimately rendered a
sound decision.
As the trial magistrate rightly found, the issue of identification of the appellants at the
scene during the commission of the robbery in this case was effectively resolved. The
evidence of P.W.1 and P.W.7 on identification of the I appellants at the scene and
during the incident is watertight, and the same meets the test set by the
1991 TLR p141
NCHALLA J
court of Appeal of Tanzania in its decision in the case of Waziri Amani, 1980 TLR
.250. The incident took place A at night, but in the early hours of night at 8.30 p.m.
when ordinarily most people in the village are still awake. P.W.1 was still preparing
food, that is, dinner, in her house where her children were too. Suddenly, the door of
her house was kicked open, and the two appellants stormed the house. The
appellants were accompanied by another B person called Kilavo who was killed in
another robbery incident after this robbery took place, and so he was not charged in
this case jointly with the appellants. P.W.1 like P.W.7, properly saw and identified
the assailants from a lamp which was then on in the house where P.W.1 was cooking
food. P.W.1 knew all the assailants before, as they C happened to live in the
neighbourhood. The assailants had not disguised themselves in any way. Moreover
the first appellant spoke to P.W.1 before attacking her. It was from very close range,
that is, right at the spot where P.W.1 was cooking food. P.W.1 described the
appellants' attire. The first appellant wore a white shirt, while the D second
appellant wore a red hat and a red jacket. The first appellant was holding a Panga.
The attack lasted for a considerable time.
The description given by P.W.1 and P.W.7 of the appellants' attire during the robbery
tallies with the description of E that attire given by P.W.3 who is an independent
witness whose testimony cannot, and was not, faulted in any way. P.W.3 had met
with the appellants on the material night at about 7.00 p.m. when the appellants went
to her house to borrow a panga, and P.W.3 indeed, gave her panga to the appellants
who then left. An hour or so later F P.W.3 heard the alarm from P.W.1's house
when she was attacked and robbed of her money 20,000/= and other property. It was
in the same village.
After P.W.1 was cut with a panga and after she had been taken to hospital P.W.4 and
P.W.6 remained hiding near G P.W.1's house. As they were hiding there they saw
two persons near P.W.1's house. When they approached them those two persons
started fleeing. P.W. 4 who was armed with a panga threw it on one of these two
fleeing persons and hit him with that panga. Nevertheless these two persons ran on
and disappeared in the bush. P.W.4 H and P.W. 6 looked about at P.W.1's house
and they found a white - blood - stained shirt.
On the same night and about the same time when P.W.1 reached the hospital on the
material night, the 1st appellant also arrived at the same hospital and had his hand cut
with some sharp instrument which could have been a panga, I probably the panga
1991 TLR p142
NCHALLA J
A which P.W.4 had thrown at a person whom he did not properly identify at the
scene. The first appellant alleged that he was cut with a panga by a person he did not
identify when he was going to P.W.1's house in answer to her alarm she had raised on
the material night. This evidence by the first appellant cannot be true. Why did he
flee B when he was cut with the panga. He should have raised an alarm and should
have complained immediately to his fellow villagers who would have supported his
version in this case. To the contrary the first appellant makes a bare assertion which
is not supported by the circumstances of this case.
C When the 2nd appellant's house was searched the red hat and red jacket were
found which resemble to those which the 2nd appellant wore on the material night as
described by P.W.1, P.W.3 and P.W.7.
D On the whole the evidence of P.W.1 and P.W.7 who are eye witnesses to this
robbery, coupled with circumstantial evidence from P.W.3, P.W.4 and P.W.6
together with the exhibits tendered namely exhibits C nd D has established the
charge of robbery on both appellants beyond any shadow of doubt and the conviction
that was E entered on them by the trial subordinate court is well founded and I
upheld it. The contradictions in the prosecution case are not at all fatal.
As to the sentence of fifteen years imprisonment that was imposed by the trial court,
the same, in my view, was F inadequate and in disregard to the mandatory
provisions of section 5 (b) of the Minimum Sentences Act, 72 as amended by Act No.
10/1989. That section now reads, "5 (bb) where any person is convicted of armed
robbery, the court shall sentence him to imprisonment for a term of not less than
thirty years etc."
G No doubt the type of robbery that the appellants committed in this case is armed
robbery. They were armed with pangas which they used to cut P.W.1 successively
and on several parts of her body as evidenced by the doctor's report on PF 3 (Exh. A).
Consequently, I set aside the illegal sentence of fifteen years imprisonment that was
H imposed on each appellant, and I substitute therefor a sentence of thirty (30) years
imprisonment on each appellant and I confirm that sentence. The order of
compensation is proper and I uphold the same.
The appeals lack substance and merit, the same are dismissed in their entirety.
I Appeal dismissed.
1991 TLR p143
A
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