Case LawGhana
REPUBLIC VRS MUSAH (127/22) [2024] GHACC 94 (15 April 2024)
Circuit Court of Ghana
15 April 2024
Judgment
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT, HELD IN NSUTA, ON MONDAY,
THE 15TH DAY OF APRIL 2024 BEFORE HER HONOUR
WINNIE AMOATEY-OWUSU, CIRCUIT COURT JUDGE
CASE NO: 127/22
THE REPUBLIC
VRS.
SEIDU MUSAH
JUDGMENT
1. On 18th March 2022, the accused was arraigned before this
Court for various offences under the Criminal Offences Act,
1960 (Act 29). His plea was not taken. On 4th April 2022, the
prosecution withdrew the original Charge Sheet and
substituted it with a new Charge Sheet by which the accused
is charged with two counts of threat of death; one count of
offensive conduct conducive to breach of the peace; and one
count of escape from lawful custody contrary to Section 75,
207 and 226(1)(c) respectively of Act 29. He pleaded not guilty
to the charges.
Page 1 of 36
2. A summary of the facts as contained in the accompanying
Charge Sheet and read by the prosecution at the
commencement of the case is that, the complainant, Abdullai
Billa is resident at Kintampo and the Farm Manager of Y and
M Regeneration Limited (hereinafter called “the Company”)
whilst the accused is a farmer resident at Mampong. In 2020,
the Company bought 1,000 acres of land located at Balana
from the Paramount Chief of Beposo, Nana Boamah Kwabi IV
for farming projects. During the latter part of February 2022,
the Company started cultivating maize on the land when the
accused went onto the land and threatened the workers
verbally that if they did not stop the work and leave the land,
he would kill them with a cutlass. He also rained insults on
them to wit: “fools, useless, senseless and stupid beings” and
other abusive words. For fear of their lives, the workers left
the land and went home. A report was made to that effect at
the Beposo Police Station leading to the accused’s arrest. The
accused and the complainant were sent to the Station Officer’s
office for further interrogation. While the Station Officer was
interrogating the accused, the Station Officer received a
Page 2 of 36
phone call and went out to listen to it. On his return to his
office, he did not see the accused and the complainant told
him the accused also received a call and went out to receive it
but did not return. On 17th March 2022, the accused was re-
captured from his hideout at Ejura and cautioned in the
presence of an independent witness. After the investigation,
he was charged with the offences herein and arraigned before
this Court.
3. Article 19(2)(c) of the 1992 Constitution states that an accused
is presumed innocent until he is proved guilty or he pleads
guilty. In a criminal trial, the burden rests with the prosecution
to prove the charge against the accused.
4. The burden of proof in criminal cases is codified in the
Evidence Act, 1975 (NRCD 323) as follows:
“Burden of Proof
10. Burden of persuasion defined
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(1) For the purposes of this Act, the burden of persuasion
means the obligation of a party to establish a requisite
degree of belief concerning a fact in the mind of the
tribunal of fact or the Court.
(2) The burden of persuasion may require a party
(a) to raise a reasonable doubt concerning the existence or
non-existence of a fact, or
(b) to establish the existence or non-existence of a fact by a
preponderance of the probabilities or by proof beyond
a reasonable doubt.
11. Burden of producing evidence defined
(1) For the purposes of this Act, the burden of producing
evidence means the obligation of a party to introduce
sufficient evidence to avoid a ruling on the issue against
that party.
(2) In a criminal action, the burden of producing evidence,
when it is on the prosecution as to a fact which is essential
Page 4 of 36
to guilt, requires the prosecution to produce sufficient
evidence so that on the totality of the evidence a
reasonable mind could find the existence of the fact
beyond a reasonable doubt.
(3) In a criminal action, the burden of producing evidence,
when it is on the accused as to a fact the converse of
which is essential to guilt, requires the accused to
produce sufficient evidence so that on the totality of the
evidence a reasonable mind could have a reasonable
doubt as to guilt.
13. Proof of crime
(1) In a civil or criminal action, the burden of persuasion as to
the commission by a party of a crime which is directly in
issue requires proof beyond a reasonable doubt.
(2) Except as provided in section 15 (c), in a criminal action,
the burden of persuasion, when it is on the accused as to a
fact the converse of which is essential to guilt, requires only
that the accused raise a reasonable doubt as to guilt.”
Page 5 of 36
Also, Section 22 of NRCD 323 provides:
“22. Effect of certain presumptions in criminal actions
In a criminal action, a presumption operates against the
accused as to a fact which is essential to guilt only if the
existence of the basic facts that give rise to the presumption
are found or otherwise established beyond a reasonable
doubt, and, in the case of a rebuttable presumption, the
accused need only raise a reasonable doubt as to the
existence of the presumed fact.”
5. In Abdul Raman Watara Benjamin v. The Republic, Criminal
Appeal No. H2/17/2019 dated 9th July, 2020 (unreported), the
court stated, “It is trite that in criminal trials it is the duty of
the prosecution to prove the case against the accused person
beyond reasonable doubt. This has been codified in sections
11(2), 13(1) and 22 of the Evidence Act, 1975 (NRCD 323). At
the end of the trial the prosecution must prove every element
of the offence and show that the defence is not reasonable. The
prosecution assumes the burden of persuasion or the legal
burden as well as the evidential burden or the burden to
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produce evidence. The legal burden or the burden of
persuasion is to prove every element of the charge. The
evidential burden is to adduce evidence that will suffice to
establish every element of the offence. This burden remains on
the prosecution throughout the case. Proof beyond reasonable
doubt also implies that it is beyond dispute that the accused
person was the one who committed the offence.” Also, in
Asare v. The Republic [1978] GLR 193 @ 197, Anin JA held,
“As a general rule there is no burden on the accused; that he is
presumed innocent until his guilt is established beyond
reasonable doubt; that the burden is rather on the prosecution
to prove the charge against him beyond reasonable doubt”.
6. In Brobbey & Ors v. The Republic [1982-83] GLR 608,
Twumasi J explained the expression “proof beyond
reasonable doubt” as follows: “Proof beyond reasonable
doubt in a criminal trial implies that the prosecution’s case
derives its essential strength from its own evidence.
Therefore, where part of the evidence adduced by the
prosecution favors the accused, the strength of the
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prosecution’s case is diminished proportionately and it
would be wrong for a court to ground a conviction on the
basis of the diminished evidence.” Lord Denning MR in
Miller v. Minister of Pensions [1947] ALL ER 372 also
explained the principle when he stated that: “The degree of
cogency need not reach certainty but it must carry a high
degree of probability. Proof beyond reasonable doubt does
not mean proof beyond the shadow of a doubt. The law
would fail to protect the community if it admitted fanciful
possibilities to affect the course of justice. If the evidence is so
strong against a man as to leave only a remote possibility in
his favor which can be dismissed with a sentence “of course
it is possible but not in the least probable” the case is proved
beyond reasonable doubt but nothing short of that will
suffice”.
7. When the prosecution makes a prima facie case against the
accused and the Court calls on the accused to open his defence,
the accused’s only duty is to raise a reasonable doubt about his
guilt. See Section 11(3) and 13(2) of NRCD 323. In
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Commissioner of Police v. Antwi [1961] GLR 408, the court
held, “The fundamental principles underlying the rule of law
are that the burden of proof remains throughout on the
prosecution and the evidential burden shifts to the accused
only if at the end of the case for the prosecution an explanation
of circumstances peculiarly within the knowledge of the
accused is called for. The accused is not required to prove
anything. If he can merely raise a reasonable doubt as to his
guilt he must be acquitted.”
8. In considering the accused’s defence, the Court is bound to
consider any evidence which favors his case as well as the
cautioned statements obtained from him by the Police and
tendered during the trial. See Kwame Atta & Anor v.
Commissioner of Police [1963] 2 GLR 460; Annoh v.
Commissioner of Police [1963] 2 GLR 306. Further, questions
asked and answers given during cross-examination form part
of a party’s evidence and must be considered by the court in
evaluating the evidence as a whole. See Ladi v. Giwah [2013-
2015] 1 GLR 54.
Page 9 of 36
In Lutterodt v. Commissioner of Police [1963] 2 GLR 429, the
Supreme Court per Ollennu JSC set out how the court should
approach the defence of the accused as follows: “In all criminal
cases where the determination of a case depends upon facts and
the court forms the opinion that a prima facie case has been
made, the court should proceed to examine the case for the
defence in three stages:
a. if the explanation of the defence is acceptable, then the
accused should be acquitted;
b. if the explanation is not acceptable, but is reasonably
probable, the accused should be acquitted;
c. if quite apart from the defence's explanation, the court is
satisfied on a consideration of the whole evidence that the
accused is guilty, it must convict.”
See also Regina v. Abisa Grunshie [1955] 11 WALR 36
9. Also, in Republic v. Francis Ike Uyanwune [2013] 58 GMJ
162, CA, it was held per Dennis Adjei, JA that: “The law is that
the prosecution must prove all the ingredients of the offence
charged in accordance with the standard burden of proof; that
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is to say the prosecution must establish a prima facie case and
the burden of proof would be shifted to the accused person to
open his defence and in so doing, he may run the risk of non-
production of evidence and/ or non-persuasion to the required
degree of belief else he may be convicted of the offence. The
accused must give evidence if a prima facie case is established
else he may be convicted and, if he opens his defence, the court
is required to satisfy itself that the explanation of the accused
is either acceptable or not. If it is acceptable, the accused
should be acquitted and if it is not acceptable, the court should
probe further to see if it is reasonably probable. If it is
reasonably probable, the accused should be acquitted, but if it
is not, and the court is satisfied that in considering the entire
evidence on record the accused is guilty of the offence, the
court must convict him. This test is usually referred to as the
three-tier test.”
10. Upon the direction of the Court, the prosecution filed its
Witness Statements and other disclosures on 6th June 2022.
Case Management Conference was held and the case
proceeded to trial with the prosecution’s case. The
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prosecution called five witnesses. Apart from paragraph 14
of PW1’s Witness Statement which was struck out as being
prejudicial, the Witness Statements were adopted as the
witnesses’ evidence in the case. The prosecution witnesses
are:
I. Abdulai Bila – PW1: The complainant resident at
Kintampo and Farm Manager of Y and M
Regeneration Limited;
II. Yushau Abubakari - PW2: A tractor driver resident
at Bawa Akura at Kintampo;
III. Adam Zakari – PW3: A farmer resident at Balana;
IV. C/Insp. Agyare Frank- PW4: The Station Officer at
the Beposo Police Station; and
V. No. 56616 G/Const. Prince Addo – PW5: The
investigator of the case.
Page 12 of 36
The following were tendered by the prosecution through PW5:
I. Exhibit ‘A’: Investigation Cautioned Statement of the
accused obtained on 17th March 2022; and
II. Exhibit ‘B’: Charge Cautioned Statement of the
accused obtained on 17th March 2022.
11. By the Court’s Ruling delivered on 22nd September 2023, the
Court held that the prosecution had failed to make a prima
facie case against the accused on count 1, 2 and 3 and
accordingly acquitted and discharged him on the said
charges. On the contrary, the Court held that the prosecution
had made a prima facie case against the accused on count 4
and called on him to answer same. The accused testified
personally and called no witness. He also did not tender any
exhibit. He relied on his Witness Statement filed on 4th
December 2023 as his evidence in the case.
Page 13 of 36
12. I shall now deal with the charge, evaluating the evidence
against the accused to determine if it meets the standard of
proof of proof beyond reasonable doubt and the accused’s
defence, if it raises a reasonable doubt.
Count 4 on the Charge Sheet reads:
“COUNT FOUR
STATEMENT OF OFFENCE
ESCAPE FROM LAWFUL CUSTODY CONTRARY TO
SECTION 226(1) (C) OF THE CRIMINAL AND OTHER
OFFENCES ACT 1960 (ACT 20)
PARTICULARS OF OFFENCE
SEIDU MUSAH: AGED 47; FARMER: For that you on the
14th day of March, 2022 at about 3:45pm at Beposo in the
Ashanti Circuit and within the jurisdiction of this court, did
escape from lawful custody at Beposo Police Station.”
Page 14 of 36
13. Section 226(1)(c) states that a person commits a
misdemeanour if he endeavours to resist or prevent the
execution of the law, by escaping personally or permitting
to be rescued by any other person from lawful custody. To
successfully prove the charge, the prosecution must lead
sufficient evidence to prove that:
i. The accused was lawfully arrested and placed in
custody; and
ii. The accused escaped by himself from lawful custody
or allowed himself to be rescued from lawful custody
by another person.
14. From Section 3 of Act 30, a Police Officer may effect an arrest
by one of three means: (a) by actually touching the person or
(b) by confining the person or (c) by the person submitting
voluntarily to the custody of the Police Officer, either
verbally or by conduct. A Police Officer may arrest with or
without a warrant. Under Section 10(2)(a) of Act 30, a Police
Officer may arrest without a warrant a person whom the
Police Officer suspects on reasonable grounds of having
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committed an offence. Under Section 7 of Act 30, unless the
person being arrested is in the course of committing a crime
or is pursued immediately after escaping from lawful
custody, the Police Officer is mandated to inform the person
of the cause of the arrest, and if acting under the authority of
a warrant, notify the person of the contents thereof and if
required, show the warrant to the person.
15. The statutory duty imposed on the Police to inform the
person arrested of the cause of the arrest is made a
constitutional right in the 1992 Constitution, Article 14(2) of
which provides that a person arrested shall be informed
immediately, in a language he understands, of the reasons
for his arrest and of his right to a lawyer of his choice. In
Amadjei & Ors v. Opoku Ware [1963] 1 GLR 150 @161,
Crabbe JSC said, “A person who is arrested without a
warrant is entitled to know as soon as is reasonably
practicable that he is being arrested and also the grounds for
his arrest. If the officer arresting fails to inform the suspect
accordingly the arrest would be unlawful, unless the arrested
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man is caught red-handed and the crime is patent to high
heaven.”
16. When a Police Officer places a person under arrest, that
person shall remain in the custody of the Police unless
granted Police Enquiry bail or presented before a court of
competent jurisdiction within forty-eight hours of the arrest
for the court to consider whether to remand or release the
person on bail. See Article 14(3)(b) of the 1992 Constitution.
Where an arrest is made in accordance with law and the
person is placed in lawful custody, a person commits an
offence if he escapes therefrom. On the contrary, where the
arrest is unlawful, a person who escapes therefrom does not
commit any offence.
17. PW1 testified that he reported a case against the accused at
the Beposo Police Station on 14th March 2022. PW4 and PW5
corroborate PW1’s testimony of the report he made against
the accused to the Beposo Police which they said was a case
of threat of death. There is also undisputed evidence that the
accused himself reported to the Beposo Police Station on 14th
Page 17 of 36
March 2022. According to PW4, upon his arrival, the accused
was placed under arrest after his offence had been pointed
out to him and he was detained behind the counter. He
testified further that he asked PW5 to parade the accused and
the complainant in his office and while he was with them in
his office, he got a phone call and went outside to receive it
leaving them behind. On his return, the accused was
nowhere to be found and the complainant told him that
while he was away, the accused also went outside to receive
a phone call. PW5 corroborates PW4’s testimony in all
material particulars and testified further that a search was
conducted but the accused was nowhere to be found.
18. By way of defence, the accused denied he escaped from
lawful custody on 14th March 2022. He said he was not even
arrested on the said date. He testified that on arrival at the
Police Station on the said date, he was told a complaint of
threat of death had been made against him. On hearing that,
he narrated his side of the story to the Police Officer after
which the Police Officer asked him for money which he
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reluctantly gave him. Thereafter, he left the Police Station. He
maintained he never escaped from lawful custody. He said
he was not informed he was under arrest; neither was his
statement taken at the Police Station on the said date. Rather,
it was on 17th March 2022 that to his utmost surprise, he was
told he was under arrest and taken to the Police Station and
his cautioned statements were taken the same day. He said
the prosecution’s case against him was frivolous and
misconceived.
19. There is incontrovertible evidence that the accused reported
to the Police Station by himself on 14th March 2022. There is
however no evidence whether he went there upon the
invitation of the Police or not. Throughout the defence
counsel’s cross-examination of PW4 and PW5, he maintained
the accused was never arrested on 14th March 2022 when he
went to the Police Station, a claim PW4 and PW5 denied. This
also ensued when the accused was cross-examined by the
prosecution:
Page 19 of 36
Q. According to paragraph 10 of your Witness Statement,
you went to the Police Station on 14/3/2022 by yourself. Is
that so?
A. That is true, my Lord.
Q. Then, on what basis did you go to the Police Station on
the said date?
A. The complainant in this case made certain allegations
against me so I went to the Police Station to tell my side
of the story.
Q. When you arrived at the Beposo Police Station, what did
the Police tell you?
A. The Police did not say anything to me immediately I
arrived at the Station but I was the one who approached
the Station Master (PW4) and told him the allegations
that the complainant had leveled against me are not
true.
Page 20 of 36
Q. Then, do you agree with me that when you went to the
Police Station to explain yourself, there was already a
case against you from the complainant?
A. The complainant had not lodged any case against me
then.
Q. Then, what did you hear that made you go to the Police
Station to explain yourself to the Station Master?
A. Sometime ago, I heard that one Abdulai Billa whom I
did not know had said I had said I would let blood flow.
Q. If there was no case against you at Beposo Police Station
and you only heard the statement made by the
Complainant, then, why did you not go to the Nsuta
Police Station, but rather went to Beposo Police Station?
A. I went to Beposo Police Station because earlier I went to
see the Beposomanhene with Ejura Member of
Parliament (Hon. Bawa Braimah) and my brother and
that was when I was told that Abdulai Billa
(complainant) had made allegations against me that I
Page 21 of 36
had said I will let blood flow. Upon hearing that, I,
together with the MP and my brother went to the Beposo
Police Station to explain my side of the story that the
allegations were not true. The next day, I went to the
Police Station again with my brother to further explain
things to the Station Master. After my discussion with
the Station Master and we were about to leave, the
complainant also came to the Police Station. The Station
Master then told us that the complainant has reported a
matter against me that I had said I will let blood flow. I
told the complainant that if this is the matter that he has
brought to the Police today, then it is the same as the
matter we came to discuss yesterday so there was no
outstanding issue. There, the linguist of the Beposo Chief
came to the Police Station and told me to find some
money for the Station Master so that we can leave. My
brother and I gave the Station Master money and we left
the Station.
Page 22 of 36
Q. Then per what you just told the Court, would you then
agree with me that the Police officially told you that the
complainant had made a case against you?
A. The Police did not officially tell me that the complainant
has lodged a case against me. It was just a verbal
conversation we were having.
Q. You are not being truthful to this Court because you were
officially told that a case had been lodged against you by
Abdulai Billa.
A. That is not true.
20. The accused’s claim that PW1 had not lodged any case
against him at the time he went to the Beposo Police Station
on 14th March 2022 and that the Police did not also officially
inform him that PW1 had made a complaint against him is
not borne out of his evidence-in-chief and cross-examination
above. In paragraph 11 of his Witness Statement, the
accused stated that on arrival at the Police Station on the said
date, he was told that a complaint of threat of death had
Page 23 of 36
been made against him and on hearing that, he narrated his
side of the story to the Police Officer. The evidence shows
the Police Officer is PW4.
21. In the cross-examination posers above, the accused stated
that the complainant in this case (PW1) made certain
allegations against him and so he went to the Police Station
to tell his side of the story. Clearly, the accused would not
have gone to the Beposo Police Station if he had not heard by
whatever means, that there was a complaint against him at
that particular Police Station.
22. The accused further testified in his evidence-in-chief that
after narrating his side of the story to PW4, PW4 asked him
for money which he reluctantly gave him after which he left
the Police Station. Under cross-examination, he stated that
he and his brother gave PW4 money on the said date after
which they left the Police Station. Part of what further
ensued during the accused’s cross-examination is as follows:
Page 24 of 36
Q. I put to you that upon the return of the Station Officer,
you were nowhere to be found. You had left his office.
A. That is not true. Before leaving the Station Officer’s
Office, I bade him farewell and gave him money.
Q. I put to you that it was at that point that a case of escape
from lawful custody was made against you.
A. That is not true. When I was leaving, I bade farewell to
the Station Officer and gave him money. I also gave the
Station Officer’s phone number to my son to
transfer/send additional GH¢300.00 to the Station Officer.
Earlier when PW4 was cross-examined on 3rd August 2023,
this transpired:
Q. You took some monies from the accused through his
brother in respect of this matter. Not so?
A. My Lord, it is not true.
23. Since PW4 denied he took any money from the accused, the
accused was supposed to adduce sufficient evidence to prove
Page 25 of 36
the payment of the said monies and establish the requisite
degree of belief concerning his assertion in the mind of the
Court but he failed to do so. Although the accused claimed
he even gave PW4’s phone number to his son to make a
transfer of an additional GH¢300 to PW4, he produced no
evidence of the said electronic fund transfer. Monies or funds
transferred by electronic means are easily verifiable from the
electronic records of the sender, recipient or the electronic
fund transfer service provider. In Mallam Ali Yusuf Issah v.
The Republic [2003] DLSC2390, the Supreme Court stated,
“The burden of producing evidence and the burden of
persuasion are the components of ‘the burden of proof’.
Thus, although an accused person is not required to prove
his innocence, during the course of his trial, he may run a risk
of non-production of evidence and/or non-persuasion to the
required degree of belief, particularly when he is called upon
to mount a defence.” See also Republic v. Francis Ike
Uyanwune [supra]
Page 26 of 36
24. I have stated earlier in this Judgment that PW4 and PW5’s
testimony is consistent that the accused was put under arrest
and placed behind the counter and subsequently paraded
together with PW1 before PW4 in his office for interrogation.
That, it was while in PW4’s office that in the absence of PW4,
the accused left the Police Station without notice. When the
defence counsel cross-examined PW4 and PW5 on 3rd August
2023, aside the fervent denial that the accused was placed
under arrest on the said date, he did not challenge the rest of
PW4 and PW5’s testimony pertaining to the charge.
However, the accused’s testimony under cross-examination
suggests he was never paraded with PW1 before PW4 in his
office and that the only time he went to PW4’s office on the
said date was when he said he went to bid PW4 farewell
before he left the Police Station. Relevant portions of the
accused’s cross-examination are as follows:
Q. I put to you that when the offence was pointed to you, you
were immediately arrested and kept behind the counter.
Page 27 of 36
A. That is not true. When we went to see the Station Master
at the Police Station, we did not enter the Police Station
building. We sat on a bench in front of the Police Station.
He was not present when we arrived. Shortly after our
arrival, the Station Master arrived and we discussed the
matter where we were seated on the bench. After the
discussion, the Station Master went to his office and we
decided to go and bid him farewell. It was on 17/3/2022
that I was arrested and kept in the Police cell.
Q. I put to you that on 14/3/2022 when you were arrested
and the Station Master arrived, you were paraded before
the Station Master (Station Officer) together with the
complainant.
A. I was not arrested on 14/3/2022 by the Police and I was
not paraded before the Station Officer on that day
together with the complainant.
Page 28 of 36
Q. At the Station Officer’s Office, the Station Officer went
out to receive a call, leaving behind you and the
complainant including the investigator.
A. That is not true.
Q. I put to you that upon the return of the Station Officer,
you were nowhere to be found. You had left his office.
A. That is not true. Before leaving the Station Officer’s
Office, I bade him farewell and gave him money.
Q. Following your absence, the Station Officer was also
told by the complainant that you asked permission to
make a call and you did not return.
A. That is not true. When I arrived home that day, I
phoned the Station Officer and told him I was home.
25. In my view, the claims made by the accused through his
responses above are serious. Yet, when he had the
opportunity through his counsel to cross-examine PW4, the
said Station Officer/ Master, he failed to put the said claims
Page 29 of 36
across for his response. The court has held in Yaokumah v.
The Republic [1976] 2 GLR 147 that if a defence was to carry
any weight, it must be put to the prosecution witnesses
during their testimony.
26. Although the accused has denied throughout the trial that he
was arrested on 14th March 2022 when he reported to the
Beposo Police Station, his statement in Exhibit B is an
admission that he did indeed escape from lawful custody.
The accused is said to have stated in Exhibit B as follows: “I
relied [sic] on my former statement given to police on
17/03/2022 but admit to the offence of escaping from lawful
custody.”
27. Exhibit A and B were admitted without any objection from
the defence counsel. Whereas Exhibit B contains a confession
to the charge of escape from lawful custody, Exhibit A is not
a confession at all. It is worth mentioning that in Exhibit A,
the offence for which the accused was investigated is threat
of death and the accused’s statement therein was principally
Page 30 of 36
about what transpired on the land under his cultivation on
15th March 2022 which pertained to count 1, 2 and 3. But, in
Exhibit B, it is indicated that he is charged with threat of
death, offensive conduct conducive to breach of the peace
and escape from lawful custody.
28. Confessions are governed by Section 120 of NRCD 323. A
confession statement voluntarily made in accordance with
the law is admissible and sufficient ground for the conviction
of an accused. See Duah v. The Republic [1987-88] 1 GLR
343. In Ekow Russell v. The Republic [2017-2020] SCGLR
469, Akamba JSC stated, “A confession is an
acknowledgment in express words, by the accused in a
criminal charge, of the truth of the main fact charged or of
some essential part of it. By its nature, such statement if
voluntarily given by an accused person himself, offers the
most reliable piece of evidence upon which to convict the
accused. It is for this reason that safeguards have been put in
place to ensure that what is given as a confession is voluntary
Page 31 of 36
and of the accused person’s own free will without any fear,
intimidation, coercion, promises or favours.”
29. In the recent case of Francis Arthur v. The Republic,
Criminal Appeal No. J3/02/2020 dated 8th December 2021
(unreported), the Supreme Court held that confession
statements may be used alone in the conviction of an accused
person, and such evidence is sufficient as long as the trial
judge enquired most carefully into the circumstances in
which the alleged confession was made and was satisfied of
its genuineness. In the earlier case of State v. Otchere & Ors
[1963] 2 GLR 463, the Supreme Court stated that a confession
made by an accused in respect of the crime for which he is
tried is admissible against him provided it is affirmatively
shown on the part of the prosecution that it was free and
voluntary and that it was made without the accused being
induced to make it by any promise or favour, or by menaces,
or undue terror. That, a confession made by an accused of the
commission of a crime is sufficient to sustain a conviction
Page 32 of 36
without any independent proof of the offence having been
committed by the accused.
30. In Exhibit B, the accused relied on Exhibit A and added that
he admitted the offence of escaping from lawful custody.
When an accused has an opportunity to give another
statement to the Police and he relies on his former or earlier
statement, it is deemed that he gave the statements
voluntarily. See Kerechy Duru v. The Republic [2014] 71
GMJ 186. I have also given thoughtful consideration to
Exhibit B and find that it was taken in the presence of an
independent witness in the person of Osei Adom Junior of
Beposo who gave his certificate indicating the accused
voluntarily gave the statement and same was read and
explained to him after which the accused thumbprinted to
signify his approval. Exhibit B thus meets the requirements of
Section 120 of NRCD 323.
31. The question on the mind of the Court is, if the accused was
not arrested and placed in lawful custody, why did he admit
Page 33 of 36
to escaping from lawful custody in Exhibit B? Since neither
the accused nor his counsel raised any objection to the
tendering of Exhibit B and the Court having satisfied itself
that Exhibit B meets the requirements of Section 120 of
NRCD 323, the only reasonable inference to be drawn is that
the accused admitted escaping from lawful custody because
he was indeed arrested and placed in the lawful custody of
the Police on 14th March 2022.
32. In Gyabaah v. Republic [1984-86] 2 GLR 461 @ 471, the Court
of Appeal per Osei-Hwere JA held that, “For the law was that
a witness whose evidence on oath was contradictory of a
previous statement made by him, whether sworn or unsworn,
was not worthy of credit and his evidence could not be
regarded as being of any importance in the light of his
previous contradictory statement unless he was able to give a
reasonable explanation for the contradiction.” See also
Odupong v. Republic [1992-93] GBR 1038
33. The accused having admitted in Exhibit B which was taken
three days after he is said to have escaped from lawful
Page 34 of 36
custody, that he indeed escaped from lawful custody, I do
not find credible his testimony before this Court that he was
never placed under arrest, in the absence of any reasonable
explanation for the contradiction. In short, I do not find his
defence acceptable.
34. On the totality of the evidence adduced, I find that the
accused has failed to raise reasonable doubt about his guilt
on count 4. I find him guilty and he is accordingly
convicted.
35. In passing sentence, I have taken into account the fact that the
accused is a first offender and the mitigation plea advanced
by the defence counsel on his behalf. I have also taken into
account the submission by the prosecution. I will deal with
the accused leniently. I sentence him to a fine of 70 penalty
units, in default 3 months’ imprisonment.
Page 35 of 36
SGD.
HH WINNIE AMOATEY-OWUSU
CIRCUIT COURT JUDGE
PARTIES AND REPRESENTATION:
1. THE ACCUSED PRESENT
2. INSP. CHRISTOPHER KWAME GYESI FOR THE
PROSECUTION PRESENT
3. NANA AKWASI OSEI BONSU ESQ. FOR THE
ACCUSED
Page 36 of 36
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