AGNES SEVERINI v MUSSA MDOE 1989 TLR 164 (CA)
Court Court of Appeal of Tanzania- Tanga
Judge Kisanga JJA, Omar JJA and Mnzavas JJA
22 September, 1989 H
Flynote
Civil Practice and Procedure - Appeals - To the Court fo Appeal - Case originating
from Primary Court - A certificate on a point of law necessary. I
Civil Practice and Procedure - Assessors - Omission to take assessor's opinion - Effect.
1989 TLR p165
MAINA J
-Headnote
This was a third appeal arising from a suit filed in the Primary Court to recover a
piece of A land. The appellant asserted that she bought the piece of land in 1966. In
1974 she took up the respondent as her boyfriend and they lived together, for one
year after which they parted company and lived apart. In 1987 the respondent sold
the disputed piece of B land claiming that he bought it from someone else. After the
conclusion of the respondent's case only one assessor gave his opinion to the Primary
Court Magistrate. The Primary Court gave judgment in favour of the respondent. The
appellant's appeals to the District and High Courts were unsuccessful. As the appeal to
the Court of Appeal was the third one it needed a certificate on a point of law by the
High Court. C
Held: (i) The correct point of law to be determined by the Court of Appeal is the
question of the constitution of the Primary Court at the time it decided the suit; D
(ii) the omission by the trial magistrate to take the opinion of the second
assessor was fatal and it rendered the purported judgment null and void;
(iii) the judgment of the Primary Court is set aside and the judgments of the
two appellate courts below necessarily crumble. E
Case Information
Order accordingly.
[zJDz]Judgment
Kisanga, Omar and Mnzavas, JJ.A.: This is a third appeal arising from a suit F
brought in the Primary Court to recover a piece of land. The appellant, a woman,
testified in the Primary Court that she bought the disputed land in 1966. In 1974 she
took up the respondent as her boyfriend and they lived together for one year after
which they parted company and lived apart. Then in 1987 the respondent sold the
land in question claiming that it was his land which he had bought from someone
else. The G Primary Court disallowed the appellant's claim. The appellant's appeal to
the District Court was dismissed and further appeal to the High Court was equally
unsuccessful. The present appeal to this Court is upon a certificate by the High Court
that appoint of law is H involved in the decision, namely, whether the concurrent
decisions of the courts below were supported and justified by the evidence. Both
parties who were unrepresented each appeared and argued the appeal in person.
We wish to observe at the outset that this was an unsatisfactory way of certifying a
point I of law. That certificate is capable of two
1989 TLR p166
KISANGA JJA, OMAR JJA AND MNZAVAS JJA
interpretations. It could mean posing the question whether there was any evidence at
all A to support the concurrent decisions of the courts below. It could equally mean
to ask the question whether the evidence as adduced was sufficient to support and
justify those decisions. How, this distinction is imported. The question whether there
was any B evidence at all to support the decision is a question of law which can
properly be certified for the opinion of this court. But whether the evidence as
adduced was sufficient to support the decision is a question of fact which could not
properly be the subject of a certificate for the opinion of this court. For, this court
takes the view that if there was C some evidence on which the courts below could
have arrived at the decision they did, then this court will not interfere, even though
had this court itself tried the case it might have come to a different decision. Those
who are called upon to certify points of law should, therefore, keep this distinction in
mind in order to ensure that only the correct D questions are certified for the
opinion of this court.
The learned High Court judge who certified the point of law in this case found that
the three courts below misconstrued or neglected altogether the evidence of the
appellant's witness (PW.4). That witness had testified that in 1984 he, as an
agricultural field E assistant, had allocated some of the appellant's land to some
"wananchi" or villagers, and that before doing so he had to consult the appellant as
the owner of the land. The learned judge criticised the trial court and the first and
second appellate courts for wrongly understanding PW.4 as saying that he had
allocated the disputed land to the F appellant in 1984. Thus the learned judge stated
that had the three courts below taken the correct view of PW.4's evidence, he was in
doubt if they would have come to the conclusion which they did.
It is pertinent to point out here that this criticism would be relevant only in relation
to the G decisions of the first and second appellate courts. The District Court which
heard the first appeal clearly fell into the error. That court took the mistaken view
that PW.4 said that he had allocated the disputed land to the appellant in 1984. And
the Principal H Resident Magistrate (Exercising Extended Jurisdiction) who heard
the second appeal made reference to such mistaken view of the District Court without
correcting it. But the Primary Court was under no mistaken view at all about PW.4's
evidence. It did not give any impression at all that it understood PE/4 as saying that
he had allocated any land to the appellant. I
So the true position really was that the first appellate court and, to some extent, the
second appellate court, misdirected
1989 TLR p167
KISANGA JJA, OMAR JJA AND MNZAVAS JJA
themselves as to the evidence of PW.4. And the question which the learned judge
meant A to certify for our opinion is whether those courts would still have come to
the conclusions which they did, had they not so misdirected themselves. That is a
question of law which could properly be certified for opinion by this Court.
In considering that question it has to be pointed out once again that the Primary
Court in B arriving at its decision it did not rely on any mistaken view of PW.4's
evidence. It proceeded on the correct view that according to PW.4 the appellant was
in occupation of the suit land in 1984 when he allocated some of the appellant's land
to the villagers. C So the Primary Court found against the appellant not because it
took any wrong view of PW.4's evidence; it arrived at that decision upon its
unmistaken understanding and appreciation of the evidence before it.
The next question which we would have to decide is whether had the first and second
D appellate courts properly directed themselves as to PW.4's evidence, they would
still have come to the conclusion which they did. But having regard to the course
which we have decided to adopt in this appeal it is no longer necessary to do so.
What we have dealt with so far was the only point of law specifically certified for the
E opinion of this court. But the learned judge also reserved unspecified questions of
law for the opinion of the court. Thus in this ruling he said:
The applicant raises other grounds but, in view of the aforegoing I do not
consider it necessary F to deal with them. How that it has been found that this is a
fit case for consideration by the Court of Appeal I will leave the said grounds for
consideration or otherwise by the Court of Appeal itself. G
With great respect to the learned judge he was wrong in so doing, in as much as it
amounted to abdicating his responsibility in the matter. Once he had decided that
other points of law existed, he was enjoined by law to go further and spell out clearly
what H those points of law were. It was wrong for him to leave for the Court of
Appeal to guess what those points were.
In her memorandum of appeal the appellant complained that the assessor Nathaniel
Nungazija is a father-in-law of the respondent, and that she had requested the trial
court I to have the assessor disqualified on that ground but her request was not
heeded. That
1989 TLR p168
KISANGA JJA, OMAR JJA AND MNZAVAS JJA
complaint, however, is not borne out by the record. There is no endorsement by the
trial A magistrate to that effect, and the appellant made no mention of it in her
successive appeals to the District Court and the High Court. Indeed at the hearing of
the appeal the respondent vehemently denied the allegation. thus as there was
nothing to support the B appellant's allegation the same could not have been
certified for the opinion of this court.
The memorandum of appeal also raised the complaint that only one of the two
assessors in the Primary Court gave opinion in the case. This is fully supported by the
record which C clearly shows that only the first assessor gave his opinion while the
second assessor did not and was absent. This raises the question of constitution of the
court which is a point of law that could properly have been certified to us. The
omission by the second assessor to give his opinion contravened section 7 of the
Magistrates' Courts Act which D provides that:
(1) In every proceeding in the Primary Court, including a finding, the
court shall sit with not less than two assessors. E
(2) All matters in the Primary Court including a finding in any issue, the
question of adjourning the hearing, an application for bail, a question of guilt or
innocence of any F accused person, the determination of sentence, the assessment of
any monetary award and all questions and issues whatsoever shall, in the event of
difference between a magistrates and the assessors or any of them, be decided by the
votes of the majority of the magistrates and assessors present and in the event of an
equality of G votes the magistrate shall have the casting vote in addition to his
deliberative vote.
We think that it was mandatory for the second assessor to give his opinion on the
final issue in the suit i.e. which party was successful and to what extent. The omission
to do H so was necessarily fatal, and it rendered the purported decision null and
void. That is to say there was no decision by a competent or properly constituted
court. We think that the present appeal ought to succeed on that ground. Thus it
should now be clear why earlier on in this judgment we decided not to go into the
question whether the two I appellate courts below would have come to the same
conclusion if they had
1989 TLR p169
KISANGA JJA, OMAR JJA AND MNZAVAS JJA
properly directed themselves as to the evidence of PW.4. It is apparent too that we
had A to touch, although only in passing, on the purported judgment of the Primary
Court simply for the purpose of ascertaining the actual point of law which the learned
judge meant to certify for our opinion. It so happens also that this would appear to
exhaust the B unspecified questions of law which were reserved for our opinion.
In the light of the foregoing, we set aside the purported judgment of the Primary
Court. Needless to say the judgment of the first and second appellate courts
necessarily crumble; they could not stand on what has been declared a nullity. C
The question as to what future course is to be taken in this matter has exercised our
minds quite considerably. We are conscious of the time element involved in
commencing a new trial, inconveniences to the parties and the problems of resummoning
the witnesses. In the course of hearing the appeal the respondent, for
instance, informed us D that one of the witnesses who gave evidence at the trial is
already dead. Thus in order to minimize inconveniences to the parties and delays in
finalizing this matter, and in order to avoid further costs and possible problems
connected with tracing or non-availability of E witness, we direct that the matter be
remitted back to the Primary Court for action as follows: If the assessors Adam
Hamisi and Nathaniel Mungazija are still alive and can be traced, then the Primary
Court magistrate who tried the case with them should summon them, sum up the case
to them afresh on the evidence as already recorded and then F proceed to decide the
case in accordance with the provisions of section 7 of the Magistrates's Courts Act as
reproduced earlier. Thereafter any party
who is aggrieved by that decision can appeal to the District Court in the usual
manner. If the said assessors are dead or cannot be found, then the matter is to be
tried de novo G before a different magistrate and upon the same court fees as have
already been paid. It is further ordered that each party is to bear it own costs of this
appeal.
H Order accordingly.
1989 TLR p170
A
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