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TONY MANGANDA KWIIMBE v THE PEOPLE (1982) Z.R. 32 (S.C.)
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SUPREME COURT
(S.C.Z.
JUDGMENT NO. 5 OF 1982) |
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Flynote
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Criminal Law and procedure - Defence - Automatism - Evidence required to support plea of. |
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Headnote
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The applicant,
a court clerk, was charged with theft by public servant involving
K270.51; which money he received for purposes
of paying the local
court staff. However the staff were not paid and he failed to
account for the money. He pleaded insanity
and the magistrate made
a special finding under s. 167 of the Criminal Procedure Code and
remanded him in custody during
the President's pleasure. He sought
leave to appeal against the finding and the states filed a
cross-appeal. Held:
Cases cited:
For the respondent: F. V. Bruce - Lyle, State Advocate. |
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Judgment
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CULLINAN, J.S.: delivered the judgment of the court.
The applicant,
a court clerk in a local court, was charged with theft by public
servant involving K270.51. It was established
that he received
the money in question for payment of the staff at the local court.
The staff were never paid. In a statement
to the police, and in
his defence, the applicant admitted receiving the money, but in
effect raised the defence of insanity.
In delivering the judgment,
the learned trial magistrate made a special finding under s. 167
of the Criminal Procedure Code,
and ordered that the applicant be
detained during the President's pleasure. The applicant seeks
leave to appeal against that
finding and order. The learned State
Advocate Mr Bruce - Lyle has entered a cross appeal by the State
against the special
finding. He submits that there was
insufficient evidence on which the learned trial magistrate could
have made that finding.
The learned acting Director of Legal Aid,
Mr Kambiti, adopts those submissions. Indeed the applicant's
grounds of appeal
clearly resile from the defence put forward in
the trial. The applicant
in that defence, whilst stating that he was then, that is at the
time of making the police statement and at
the time of the trial,
quite normal, claimed that, on his way to effect payment of the
local court staff, he "got mixed
up in the head and . . .
became confused and . . . went into the bush walking about
aimlessly": he suffered a mental
p34 blackout for
some ten months and when he regained his senses, in February,
1979, he discovered that the money in question
was missing; he did
not, however, report the matter to his superior officer and he was
apprehended by the police a month
later. This was the first time,
he said, that he had suffered from such mental blackout, but added
that his father also suffered
from the same "disease".
The learned trial magistrate correctly observed that the burden of
proving insanity lay
upon the applicant, that is, on the balance
of probabilities. He further observed that there was no medical
evidence, however,
before the court and that
the court was "placed in a
difficult position due to the absence of such evidence".
Thereafter the learned trial
magistrate concluded that he was
"inclined to find in favour of the accused that the defence
for insanity applied to
him". In the case of Chinkashila v The People (1) the applicant introduced in effect the defence of automatism arising out of intoxication. In delivering the judgment of this court Baron, D.C.J., observed at p. 221:
Those
observations are completely in point in the present case. In the
absence of medical evidence, on the basis of the applicant's
evidence, merely that he was confused and had had mental
black-out, we cannot see how the learned trial magistrate could
have been satisfied that the applicant was suffering from a
disease affecting his mind, so as not to be responsible for his
actions. Under the circumstances, the cross-appeal by the State is
allowed; the application by the applicant therefore falls
away.
The special finding under s. 167 of the Criminal Procedure Code,
and the order of detention during
the President's pleasure, are set aside, p35 and we
substitute conviction of theft by public servant contrary to ss.
272 and 227 of the Penal Code in respect of the particulars
of
offence charged. (Mr Bruce -
Lyle informed the court that the applicant had no previous
convictions. Mr Kambiti addressed the court in mitigation
of
sentence). We sentence
the applicant to two years' imprisonment with effect from 22nd
March, 1979, the time spent under detention during
the President's
pleasure to be regarded as such imprisonment. Conviction and sentence substituted |
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