SWAHELE HAMISI v REPUBLIC 1988 TLR 139 (CA)
Court Court of Appeal of Tanzania - Mwanza
Judge Makame JJA, Kisanga JJA and Omar JJA
20 July, 1988 B
Flynote
Criminal Practice and Procedure - Sentencing - Whether the three and a half years
spent by the accused in remand custody, his relationship to the deceased and that the
deceased was the aggressor were factors which ought to have been considered by the
trial Judge before imposing sentence. C
Criminal Practice and Procedure - Sentencing - Whether there was ground to show
that sentence imposed on the appellant was excessive and that the trial judge erred in
assessing it.
-Headnote
The appellant was convicted of manslaughter on his own plea of guilty and was D
sentenced to six years imprisonment. He appealed against the sentence on the ground
that the trial Judge did not consider other factors in passing the sentence.
Held: (i) The trial Judge did not fail to consider an important matter which he ought
to E have considered in passing the sentence;
(ii) there were no adequate grounds to show that the sentence imposed on the
appellant was excessive, and that the appellant action of attacking the deceased with a
knife, a lethal weapon, was completely beyond proportion to the alleged provocative
act F done by the deceased to the accused.
Case Information
Appeal dismissed.
No cases referred to. G
Rugarabamu for the appellant.
[zJDz]Judgment
Kisanga, Makame and Omar, JJ.A.: The appellant was convicted on his own plea of
guilty to manslaughter, and was sentenced to 6 years' imprisonment. He is now H
appealing against the sentence.
In his memorandum of appeal, he raises the following mitigating factors:- That he was
a first offender; he had been in custody for about 31/2 years prior to the passing of the
I sentence; that he was related to the deceased and that the deceased was the
aggressor.
1988 TLR p140
In assessing the sentence, the learned trial judge considered all these matters; but took
A the view that the appellant's mode of retaliating by stabbing the deceased with a
knife, a lethal weapon, was completely out of proportion to the deceased's act of
merely kicking him. B
Mr. Rugarabamu, the learned advocate representing the appellant before us properly
conceded that the memorandum of appeal, which was filed by the appellant, raises no
new issues, and added that he himself had nothing to add to it.
We are satisfied that no grounds have been advanced to show that the sentence meted
C out to the appellant was excessive, or that the learned trial judge was wrong in
assessing it. Therefore there can be no ground for interfering. In the result, the appeal
has no merit and is accordingly dismissed.
D Appeal dismissed.
1988 TLR p140
E
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