Case Metadata |
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Case Number: | Criminal Appeals Nos 480, 208 and 209 of 1978 |
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Parties: | Reuben Taabu Anjononi ,Benjamin Akisa Anjononi and Monya Anjononi v Republic |
Date Delivered: | 08 Jan 1980 |
Case Class: | Criminal |
Court: | Court of Appeal at Nairobi |
Case Action: | Judgment |
Judge(s): | Eric John Ewen Law, Chunilal Bhagwandas Madan, Kenneth D Potter |
Citation: | Reuben Taabu Anjononi & 2 Others v Republic [1980]eKLR |
Advocates: | Barasa for the Appellant. Mrs Chana for the Republic. |
Court Division: | Criminal |
Parties Profile: | Individual v Government |
County: | Nairobi |
Advocates: | Barasa for the Appellant. Mrs Chana for the Republic. |
Case Summary: | Reuben Taabu Anjononi ,Benjamin Akisa Anjononi and Monya Anjononi v Republic Court of Appeal, Nairobi 8th January 1980 Madan, Law & Potter JJ A Criminal Appeals Nos 480, 208 and 209 of 1978 Criminal law – assault - actual bodily harm – injury caused in course of robbery – charge of assault not to be proceeded with after conviction for robbery. Criminal law – evidence – identification – visual identification – recognition of person previously known. The three appellants entered the complainant’s house where he was sleeping with his wife and children. They forcibly robbed the complainant of cash and other property; in the course of so doing, the second appellant cut the complainant’s wife with a panga. All three were charged with capital robbery (count 1), and the second appellant was also charged with assault causing actual bodily harm (count 2). They were all found guilty on count 1 and the second appellant was also found guilty on count 2. On appeal, Held: Allowing the appeal on count 2, that the violence which was the subject of count 2 was the same violence as had been relied on as constituting the robbery and in respect of which the second appellant had been found guilty; count 2 should not have been charged, except perhaps as an alternative to count 1, as punishment on that count would constitute a second punishment for an act committed in the course of the robbery. Observations on the value of the recognition of the accused by the complainant rather than the identification of a stranger. Case referred to in judgment:
Appeal Reuben Taabu Anjononi was convicted of capital robbery and Benjamin Akisa Anjononi and Monya Anjononi were also found guilty of that offence. Benjamin Akisa Anjononi was found guilty on a second count of causing actual bodily harm. Their appeals to the High Court (Criminal Appeals Nos 480, 208 and 209 of 1978, respectively) were dismissed by Hancox and Sachdeva JJ on 7th December 1978 and they appealed to the Court of Appeal. Their appeals were consolidated (Criminal Appeal No 63 of 1979). The facts are set out in the judgment of the court delivered by Madan JA. Advocate Barasa for the Appellant. Mrs Chana for the Republic. |
History Advocates: | Both Parties Represented |
Case Outcome: | Second appellant’s appeal on count 2 allowed. Appeals on count 1 dismissed. |
Disclaimer: | The information contained in the above segment is not part of the judicial opinion delivered by the Court. The metadata has been prepared by Kenya Law as a guide in understanding the subject of the judicial opinion. Kenya Law makes no warranties as to the comprehensiveness or accuracy of the information |
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL
AT NAIROBI
(Coram: Madan, Law & Potter JJ A)
CRIMINAL APPEALS NOS 480, 208 AND 209 OF 1978
BETWEEN
REUBEN TAABU ANJONONI ............................ 1 ST APPELLANT
BENJAMIN AKISA ANJONONI .........................2ND APPELLANT
MONYA ANJONONI ........................................3RD APPELLANT
AND
REPUBLIC...............................................................RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT
These three appellants whose appeals we have consolidated appeal against the dismissal of their appeals by the High Court from the conviction of the first appellant and the findings of guilt against the second and third appellants (they being under the age of eighteen years on the date of the commission of the offence) for capital robbery, contrary to section 296(2) of the Penal Code. In addition, the second appellant (the third appellant in the High Court) was convicted of assault causing actual bodily harm contrary to section 251 of the Penal Code, and ordered to receive two strokes corporal punishment.
A disconcerting feature of this case is the delay of about seven and a half months in the opening of the trial (although the appellants were arrested on the morning of the next day) due to lack of instructions from the Attorney-General’s chambers, as stated in Court on repeated occasions by the prosecutor.
The appellants’ victims were Wanyoni Rebela and his wife, Joice Nangila Wanyoni. Wanyoni was forcibly robbed of Shs 3900 cash and other property during the course of which Joice was unlawfully assaulted and cut with a panga by the second appellant, causing her actual bodily harm.
At about 2·00 am on 11th June 1977 the three appellants burst with a loud bang into Wanyoni’s home where he was sleeping in a room with his wife and three children. All three appellants were recognised by both Wanyoni and Joice, who had known them well previously for about two years and five years respectively, in the bright light of two torches which the first and third appellants were flashing in the room. The first appellant had married and divorced Wanyoni and Joice’s daughter. The other two appellants were his brothers, all three being sons of Anjononi. According to the complainant, the first appellant was carrying what appeared to be a gun and a panga and a torch, the second appellant what appeared to be a rifle and a panga, and the third appellant a torch and a panga.
Mr Barasa for the appellants argued as his main ground of appeal the question of identification. The proper identification of robbers is always an important issue in a case of capital robbery, emphatically so in a case like the present one where no stolen property is found in possession of the accused. Being night time the conditions for identification of the robbers in this case were not favourable. This was, however, a case of recognition, not identification, of the assailants; recognition of an assailant is more satisfactory, more assuring, and more reliable than identification of a stranger because it depends upon the personal knowledge of the assailant in some form or other. We drew attention to the distinction between recognition and identification in Siro Ole Giteya v The Republic (unreported).
We consider that in the present case the recognition of the appellants by Wanyoni and Joice to whom they were previously well known personally, the first appellant also being related to them as their son-in-law, was made both possible and satisfactory in the two brightly-lit torches which two of the appellants kept flashing about in Wanyoni’s bedroom in such a manner that the possibility of any mistake was minimal. In addition, immediately after the robbers left, Wanyoni reported their names to the owner of the farm where he worked. He also later on the same night gave the names of the three appellants to the police as the robbers who had robbed him.
We are satisfied that there was no mistake as to the identity of the three appellants and they were properly found guilty of the offence with which they were charged in count 1.
Mr Barasa further submitted with regard to count 2, which charged the second appellant alone with assaulting Joice and causing her actual bodily harm, consisting of a superficial wound from a single panga slash, that harm had not been proved by expert evidence as required by section 48 of the Evidence Act, as the medical witness called by the prosecution was a “clinical officer” and not a registered medical practitioner. We do not feel it necessary to deal with this submission, because in our view count 2 should not have been brought at all, except possibly as an alternative charge. The violence which was the subject of count 2 was the same violence as that relied on by the prosecution as constituting the capital robbery charged in count 1, an offence of which the second appellant has been convicted. If his conviction on count 2 is allowed to stand, the second appellant will have been punished twice for the same act committed in the course of the robbery charged in count 1. Mrs Chana for the Republic very properly did not support the finding of guilt of the second appellant on count 2. We agree, and quash that finding of guilt and set aside the order of two strokes corporal punishment imposed on him.
Save to this limited extent of allowing the second appellant’s appeal against his finding of guilt on count 2, these appeals fail, and the appeals of all three appellants against conviction and findings of guilt on count 1 are dismissed.
Finally, we would mention for consideration by the executive authority that there had been both matrimonial and financial disputes between the first appellant and the complainant’s family; also, the violence used during the course of the robbery was of a comparatively trivial nature.
Second appellant’s appeal on count 2 allowed.
Appeals on count 1 dismissed.
Dated and delivered at Nairobi this 8th day of January 1980.
C.B MADAN
……………......
JUDGE OF APPEAL
E.J.E LAW
……………......
JUDGE OF APPEAL
K.D POTTER
……………......
JUDGE OF APPEAL
I certify that this is a true copy of the original
DEPUTY REGISTRAR