Case Metadata |
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Case Number: | crim app 297 of 84 |
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Parties: | AMOS MBURU GATHAGU vs REPUBLIC |
Date Delivered: | 09 Oct 1984 |
Case Class: | Criminal |
Court: | High Court at Nairobi (Milimani Law Courts) |
Case Action: | Judgment |
Judge(s): | Joseph William Alexander Butler-Sloss |
Citation: | AMOS MBURU GATHAGU vs REPUBLIC[1984] eKLR |
Court Division: | Criminal |
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 |
REPUBLIC OF KENYA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF KENYA AT NAIROBI
APPELLATE SIDE
CRIMINAL APPEAL NO 297 OF 1984
(From Original Conviction and Sentence in Criminal Case No 498 of 1983 of the
Resident Magistrate’s Court at Thika, R N Kamiro Esq)
AMOS MBURU GATHAGU ……………………………… APPELLANT
V e r s u s
REPUBLIC ……………………………………………………… RESPONDENT
CORAM BUTLER-SLOSS J
Appellant absent, not wishing to be present and unrepresented
C W Gatonye (Principal State Counsel) for Respondent.
---------------------------------
J U D G E M E N T
This is the appeal of Amos Mburu Gathagu, against his conviction before the Thika Magistrates Court on 14th February, 1984, and against the sentence imposed by that Court.
The Appellant was there charged with the offence of doing grievous harm contrary to Section 234 of the Penal Code. He pleaded Not Guilty, was convicted, and was sentenced to five years imprisonment and five strokes of the cane.
The victim of this crime, (P W 1), Stanley Mburu Gathago, gave evidence that the appellant was his step brother, and that, at about 7.0 p.m. on the evening of 6th March, 1983, they had met in Mutuya bar in Githuma market center. Also present, were another step-brother, (P W 3) Samuel Mwangi Gathungu and (P W 4) John Njooka Gathungu. All four had various drinks in Mutuya bar and later in Wamiamo bar. According to (P W 3), “We continued drinking. We visited other two bars before we went home.”
In cross examining (P W 1), the appellant suggested that, one or more of the party had been so drunk that they had lost the way. (P W 1) denied this. He also denied that he had quarrel with customers or with police officers there. He denied leaving some partly consumed beers. It is indisputable that a quantity of white Cap and Tusker lager had been drunk by these four people, but it is difficult to say how much. It does not appear that the drink was taken suddenly, or just before leaving for home. It seems that their drinking was done over a relatively long period of time i.e. the four hours between 7.00 p.m. and 11.00 p.m.
After 11.00 p.m., the four men went to the house of (P W 3) Mwangi, where they had a meal, then to the house of P W 4, Njooka, where they had another meal, and finally to the house of P W 1, where they had yet another meal. This last meal was not free of contention. According to P W 3 Mwangi, P W 1 had wanted his wife to kill a hen but his wife had protested. P W 1 was cross examined about this by the appellant. He denied that he had had a quarrel with his wife about killing a chicken.
At all events, when it came to mid-night the party dispersed. (P W 1) escorted the appellant out of the compound, and pointed out the path he should take. It was suggested by the Appellant, in cross-examining (P W 1), that this had been necessary because they were all drunk but (P W 1) denied this, and said that escorting the appellant outside the compound was a matter of hospitality routine.
It was at that point that (P W 1) sustained injury to his eye. He said that the Appellant, who had spot light, violently hit him on his right eye. The medical evidence given by (P W 2) Dr. Ranganathan, was that (P W 1) had a deep cut on the right eye about 3½ inches long. The Magistrate noted that, when (P W 3) Mwangi had gone back to see what had happened, he found (P W 1) and the appellant together. This also is what (P W 4) Njooka found and it was when the Appellant saw (P W 4) Njooka, return, that the appellant ran away. Neither of these witnesses says that (P W 1’s) wife was present, though (P W 1) says that it was his wife and his mother and (P W 3) Mwangi, and (P W 4) who took him to hospital.
In these circumstances the learned magistrate rejected the theory that (P W 1) had been injured by his wife and dismissed it as concocted evidenced. He accepted the evidence of P W 1 supported as it was, by the evidence of P W 3 Mwangi and P W 4 Njooka.
In the first of his grounds of appeal, the appellant relies on the fact that, P W 1 did not produce the weapon, i.e. the spotlight with which he was injured. In the view of this court, P W 1’s failure to produce the spotlight is understandable. P W 1 was seriously injured, and both P W 1 and P W 4 say that the appellant ran away.
In the second of his grounds of appeal the appellant argues that, if there had been fighting between (P W 1) and himself, neighbours would have noticed it. However, it was not the prosecution’s case that there had been fighting between (P W 1) and appellant, but rather that the appellant had suddenly and violently struck him without any provocation. It would therefore not be expected that neighbours would intervene.
In the third of his grounds of appeal, the appellant contends that, at the police station, the Complainant’s wife claimed to be an eye-witness to the incident and yet, at the trial, she was not called as a witness. It is nowhere suggested that the Complainant’s wife, either at the police station or anywhere else, accepted responsibility for her husband’s injuries and it can therefore be assumed that had she been called as a witness by the prosecution she would have supported and strengthened the prosecution case against the appellant.
I understand that, her being the Complainant’s wife would have prevented her from being put forward as an independent witness. If the court did not believe the Complainant, it was hardly likely to believe the Complainant’s wife, and I can understand why the prosecution should decide that she was not required as a witness. Whatever may have been the reason for not calling the Complainant’s wife, her absence from the trial will not have prejudiced the appellant’s case or been to his disadvantage.
In his fourth ground of appeal, the appellant contends that his absence form home for seven months, after the offence, was treated as proof of guilt whereas there was a perfectly innocent explanation for it. It is quite usual for the appellant to be away from home, even for periods as long as a year, because he works far from home. This point was considered by the learned magistrate as being further circumstantial evidence which supported the direct evidence of the Complainant.
He said, in his judgment, that immediately after the incident he, the appellant, went into hiding and that it was only after 9 months, that he was found and arrested. To this court, delay of 9 months in arresting the appellant is equivocal in its significance, and this Court accepts that, there may be an innocent explanation for appellant’s absence during that period. There is, however, significance in the appellant immediately going into hiding after the incident, and the magistrate was entitle, in the view of this Court, to take full account of that behavior on the appellant’s part. As behavior, it was entirely consistent with the appellant’s behavior at the time of the incident itself. (P W 4) John Njooka Gathungu had said, in evidence, “Accused on seeing me, ran away”. This court does not consider that the learned magistrate misdirected himself as to the significance of the appellant’s behavior, looking at that behavior as a whole, and finds no reason here for regarding the learned magistrate’s decision as unsafe.
In his fifth, and final ground of appeal against conviction, the appellant complains that, he was ill-treated when he was in a police station, was beaten there and maimed in his left leg. Through being beaten, he was forced, the appellant says, to sign a written statement. There is no indication in the Notes of Evidence that, the prosecution relied on any such written statement, nor is there any indication in the judgment of the learned magistrate, that any such statement was before the court. It cannot, consequently, have influenced the learned magistrate in coming to his decision, and there is no force in this ground of appeal.
Having considered the evidence in the case, the reasoned judgment of the learned magistrate and the appellant’s grounds of appeal, this court considers that the learned magistrate was right in the decision he made and should be upheld. Accordingly the appeal against conviction is dismissed.
The appellant also appeals against the sentence of five years imprisonment with five strokes of the cane, which was imposed in the court below. “The learned magistrate, rightly in the view of this court, described the appellant’s behavior as “outrageous, in that, unexpectedly and for no reason, he hit the complainant thereby removing the eye”. The magistrate went on to stigmatise the appellant as “a dangerous element in a society”. On the other hand, the prosecution had accepted that the appellant was a first offender, and it follows that, he could not be a danger to society in the sense of being a habitual criminal. He had caused grave injury to the Complainant, and that, as the learned magistrate said, call for a custodial sentence, but this Court considers a custodial sentence of five years to be excessive, having regard to the appellant’s hitherto good character. With a first offender, the experience of imprisonment it self, rather than the duration of that imprisonment, is a salutary lesson which is not likely to be forgotten. The appeal against sentence will therefore be followed in part and for the sentence of five years imprisonment imposed in the court below, there will be substituted a sentence of two years imprisonment. The sentence to five strokes of the cane will be upheld.
JOSEPH BUTLER-SLOSS
JUDGE
9th October, 1984.