REPUBLIC v CHARLES KIEGEZO 1984 TLR 106 (HC)
Court High Court of Tanzania - Tanga
Judge Sisya J
August 20, 1986
CRIMINAL APPEAL 32 OF 1984
Flynote
Criminal Law - Theft - Discrepancy in accounts - Whether amounts to theft. B
Statutory Interpretation - Person employed in the public service -Person employed by
a subsidiary of a parastatal organization - Whether falls within definition of "person
employed in the public service", - Penal Code section 5. C
-Headnote
The appellant an employee of a subsidiary of a parastatal organization, was convicted
of theft by a person employed in the public service. The evidence was entirely
circumstantial in that he had failed to account for some discrepancy in his accounts.
D
Held: (i) Mere discrepancy in the accounts per se does not constitute conclusive proof
of theft;
(ii) where a person is charged with theft by a person employed in the public
service, specific evidence must be led to show that he is employed in the public
service instead of merely mentioning E the institution in which he is employed.
Case Information
Appeal dismissed F
No case referred to.
[zJDz]Judgment
Sisya, J.: This appeal is by the Director of Public Prosecutions against the acquittal by
the learned District Magistrate, Muheza, of the respondent, Charles Kiegezo, after his
trial on a charge of theft G by a person employed in the public service. He,
respondent, was alleged to have stolen cash shs.55,044/= property of his employer, the
Ngomeni Kamba Factory.
It is common ground that the respondent was employed at Ngomeni Kamba Factory
from 1/7/78 to 22/9/80 when he was dismissed from service. Although it is conceded,
as indeed it must, that H therefore he was a servant of the said Ngomeni Kamba
Factory the evidence, however, is dead silent as to why he was labelled in charge
sheet as a public servant. The term a person employed in the public service is defined
by the law, see Section 5 of the Penal Code. By reason thereof I am positive I that an
employee of, say, Amboni
1984 TLR p107
SISYA J
A Plastics Factory does not qualify for that term. The point I am driving at is that
evidence ought to have been adduced in this case by a competent witness to establish
that the respondent was, throughout the relevant period, a person employed in the
public service. For purposes of the instant B matter this is mere academic exercise
but the learned Public Prosecutor who conducted this case should, however, take
note for his future guidance.
Getting back to the facts of the case, it is likewise common ground that the
respondent started as an assistant Accountant and from 24/11/78 to the date of his
dismissal he became cashier. His duties as C cashier included receipt of all revenue
or payments made to the factory and to effect payments for and on behalf of the
factory. Every payment to the factory was to be acknowledged by issuance of an
official receipt and every payment by the factory was to be effected on or evidenced
by a D payment voucher duly authorised. It is alleged in the charge that the
respondent stole the money between 24th day of November, 1978, and 27th day of
January, 1979. The little that can be gathered from the evidence, however, tends to
suggest that there were separate and distinct takings and on different dates from those
shown in the charge sheet. In law, each distinct and separate taking or E fraudulent
conversion constitutes an offence and each offence must be charged separately, which
also means in separate counts albeit in the same charge sheet. In this instance by
conglomerating all the supposed distinct takings in a single count the person who
framed the charge erred. I do not F propose to say anything more on this point.
With these undisputed facts in the background one would have expected the person
who checked the respondent's accounts and discovered the so-called loss to have had
an easy task to perform in G so doing as well as in explaining the same to those
concerned, including the Courts of law. The man who checked the respondent's
accounts and discovered the alleged loss was one Yohana Mshami (PW2), who
described himself as the Chief Accountant at Ngomeni Kamba Factory. Contrary to
one's expectation Mshami's evidence in this case is not only confusing but it is, itself,
H also confused. It is, by far, too much below the standard required of a man of his
status. As Chief Accountant, and, more importantly, as the person, as aforesaid, who
checked the accounts and discovered the alleged theft, he is a principal witness in the
case. I will produce samples from his I text in order to demonstrate the type of his
evidence. Fairly early in his evidence-in-chief Mshami is recorded to have said, and I
quote from the record of proceedings:
1984 TLR p108
SISYA J
"On 24/11/78 he (i.e. respondent) was charged to become a cashier..... The
accused continued with this work A to 27/1/79 ..... When the accused handed the
cashier duties to the new cashier it was detected that there was shortage of cash,
shs.45,941/25. Again we detected another loss in his cash book which all amounted
to shs.55,044/20. Cash short was shs.45,941/25 as follows: B
On the handover on 24/11/78 the former cashier had a cash short of
sh.19,279/75 which the accused inherited. This sum ought to be deducted from the
actual loss attributed to the accused. Thus the C figure drops to shs.26,661/50 which
was actual loss by the accused.
It is not known what Mshami did with the figure of shs.55,044/20 which he, earlier
on, had said was the total amount of the sum lost. In his attempt to explain how the
amount in the charge was arrived D at Mshami went on to say, and, again, I quote
from the record of proceedings:
In December, 1978, the accused paid total cash shs.144,236/20 which had no
supporting documents. At the E same time he entered revenue which had no
supporting document which amounted to shs.114,406/70 the difference was
shs.29,829/40. In January, 1981 the accused paid a total amount of shs.120,185/= and
he F entered revenue of shs.95,829/55, difference was shs.34,355/45. There was also
difference of shs.13,000/= in six days he worked from 24/11/78 - 30/11/78. In this
period he paid total amount of shs.25,603/85, the revenue was shs.12,574/05, the
difference was shs.13,029/80. G
It seems Mshami took the difference between the monthly income and the monthly
expenditure as the amount 'stolen' by the respondent in that month. I must admit
that I have failed to comprehend the rationale behind this. Anyhow, the total
amount (i.e. shs.29,829/10 & shs.34,355/45 & H shs.13,029/30) is shs.77,214/65. He,
i.e. Mshami, went on to say:
On checking, we detected that there were other payments effected without
being recorded in the accused's I cash book. The amount paid by this way amounted
to shs.21,208/95. Thus
1984 TLR p109
SISYA J
A the whole difference outlined above minus this sum, the total cash paid
unsupported is shs.56,006/60.
This is actually shs.77,214/65 minus shs.21,208/05. Mshami then added:-
B I cannot tell how the accused managed to count money (for) which he had
issued no receipt.
C Likewise, it also beats my comprehension how Mshami verified his figures
without any documents. One is, thus, left in doubt as to whether the figures said to
be of expenditure and even those said to be of revenue are correct and proper. Of
equal significance is the fact that at no time or stage in his evidence did Mshami, or
any other witness for that matter, swear that he physically D checked the cash and
confirmed or verified the alleged deficit. This creates a lacuna in the Prosecution case
which is very fundamental in that it goes deep to the root of the Prosecution case.
This flaw also explains why Mshami was very erratic in his figure of the alleged stolen
sum. At one E stage in his evidence-in-chief Mshami fixed the figure at
shs.103,862/60, "which the Accused stole." He went on to tell the Court that later,
however, it was found that some of the payments made by the respondent were
'genuine'. By using his somewhat dubious calculations and F deductions Mshami
then eventually settles on shs.55,044/=. This includes three alleged payments of
shs.10,994/50, shs.3000/= and shs.7,200/= as per Exhs. PI, P2 and P6 made to him. I,
however, hasten to point out that there is not even a grain of evidence to show that
the said payments were, in fact, made to him, i.e. respondent.
G In short all that can be said about this matter is that it was a wangle right from the
word go. It is clear from the evidence of Mshami that the accounts of the Factory
were already in a mess when the respondent was told to take over but, on the
evidence and material available, the worst that can be said about the respondent is
that he made the said accounts even more hay wire. Criminally, I find H no
sufficient evidence on which to found and sustain a conviction.
In the final result this appeal fails and it is hereby dismissed.
Appeal dismissed.
1984 TLR p110
A
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