Case Law[2010] UGSC 43Uganda
Nandudu & Another v Uganda (Criminal Appeal 4 of 2009) [2010] UGSC 43 (26 October 2010)
Supreme Court of Uganda
Judgment
THE REPUBLTG OF UGANDA
IN THE SUPREME GOURT OF UGAilDA
AT ](AMPALA
{OOBAll:
oDoKt, c.J,, TsEKooKo, KATUREEBE, TUMWEstGyE AND KtsAAKyE, xsc.}
CRIMINAL APPEAL NO. 04 OF 2OO9
RESPONDEiIT
{An oppeol
lrom the decision ol the Co.{t ol Appeot ot Kompdtd (Engwau, Twinomujuni and
Byamugisho, tlA) doted 2"d Ap/tt^2(Ng in C minat Appeol No. 04 ol2OA ]
JUDG MENT OF URT
Most of the facts of this case are not disputed. Nandudu Grace, the
1"t Appellant
[A1] and
the deceased
[Mafabi
David] were uterine
sister and brother, the latter being the younger of the two. Nakiwolo
Florence, the second Appellant
[A2]
is apparenfly their step sister.
The three together with Kizito Sam [PW2],
a step brother of 41 and
uterine brother of A2, lived at Nakatyaba village, in Mukono. From
the unsworn statement of A1 in Court, it would seem, she, the
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1. NANIIUDU GRACE
2. NAK|WOTO FTORENCE
BETWTEN
: : : ::: : : : : : : ::: : : :: : : ::: : : :: : APPETI.IINTS
,.
VERSUS
UGANDA
This is a second appeal arising from the judgment
of the Court of
Appeal which confirmed the conviction by the High Court of the two
appellants for the murder of Mafabi David [the deceased].
a
deceased and PW2 lived in the same house. According to her,
although the deceased and PW2, were primary school boys, "the two
were dodging classes" and were rouges who were in the habit of
stealing other peoples' coffee. So, A1 proceeded to report this
behaviour to an aunt in Kampala. On 131412000, 41 returned home
and had in her possession Shs.10,000/= which she kept in her
handbag. The following day, (141412000), she discovered that out of
that money, Shs.5000/= was missing. She suspected the deceased
to have stolen it. lt appears that PW2 returned from school about
midday on 1410412000. He heard Al complaining that the deceased
had stolen her money. He went away and reported this to the
deceased who expressed displeasure to A1 upon his return home
latter.
What happened next is given partly by PW2, a key prosecution
witness, and partly by the appellants themselves in their respective
unsworn statements made during their trial. At about 5:00pm that
day, PW2 returned home from school and found Al quarrelling with
deceased because of the stolen money. The quarreling does not
seem to have impressed PW2 who went to town to sell his coffee.
When he returned home again at 07:00 pm, he found A1 assaulting
the deceased with a stick. This time PW2 assumed that 41 was just
chastising the deceased because of her lost money. He does not
appear to have made any attempts to dissuade Al from chastising
the deceased. He once more went away. There is no evidence
about what happened between 07:00p.m. and 10:00p.m. when PW2
returned for a third time to the scene. But it would seem that the
quarrel between 41 and the deceased did not stop altogether. This
is so because, according to PW2, when he returned to the scene at
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I
10:00 pm; he found A1 and A2 assaulting the deceased who by then
lay on the floor of the family house. At that time, it is not clear as to
what was the condition of the deceased implying that the deceased
could have been still alive because PW2 warned the two appellants
that if they don't stop beating the deceased, they would kill him.
Once again he went away and reported the beating to one Mukasa.
He could not trace the mother of the deceased. He returned to the
scene finally later and this time he found the deceased dead and the
body was covered in a blanket.
Similarly, 2nd appellant made an unsworn statement and claimed that
she went to the scene to answer an alarm. She found 41 fighting
with PW2. She asserted that she found the deceased dead. She
further asserted, like Al, that 'the boys," [deceased
and P\N2l'\vere
known thieves" on the village.
During the trial, in her unsworn statement, Al claimed that the
deceased stole her money and that when she blamed him, there was
some quarrel after which the deceased "boxed me
and dislodged a
tooth and we started struggling. He made to bite my teat but
rnissed it and planted his teeth in the breast. Then Kizito PW2
got a stick and beat me. I raised alarm and fhis accused
tA21
here came and separated us. I got a stick and hit him but I did
not know where I hit him. I hit him only twice. Then Florence
pushed me and Mafabi. Mafabi fell down and died;'
Dr. Zziwa Joachim Mbabali
[PW4], carried
out the postmortem
examination on the body of the deceased, on 161412000, two days
after the death. He noted multiple bruises on the chest, abdomen,
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After the summing up by the trial judge
one of the assessors advised
the trial judge, to convict appellants of manslaughter. The second
assessor advised the conviction for murder. The trial Judge
disbelieved the appellants. He believed the prosecution evidence.
He convicted both appellants of murder and sentenced each of them
to death on the basis that malice aforethought had been established.
The Court of Appeal confirmed that decision. Hence this appeal in
which each of the two appellants based her appeal on only one
ground.
Mr. Tiishekwa represented the first appellant. He filed one ground of
appeal and lodged a written statement of arguments. Mr. S. Mubiru
from Messrs Kawanga & Kasule, Advocates, represented the second
appellant. He also filed one ground of Appeal and lodged a written
statement of arguments in support of that ground of appeal. Ms.
Jane Akua Kajuka, Principal State Attorney
[PSA]
represented the
respondent and made oral submissions during the hearing of the
appeal.
ln the two separate but similar grounds of appeal counsel for each of
the appellants contends that the Court of Appeal erred when it
upheld the decision of the trial judge
on the basis that malice
aforethought had been proved beyond reasonable doubt.
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back, legs and arms. The deceased's body was bleeding from the
nose and the mouth. The neck was broken. ln his oral testimony in
Court, he stated that he could not tell what weapon was used.
ln view of the fact that the two grounds of appeal are similar though
filed separately and as the arguments thereon are equally similar, we
shall consider the grounds together. ln their arguments, both Mr.
Tiishekwa and Mr. Stephen Mubiru contend that there was no
evidence proving malice aforethought. They both criticized the two
courts below for their decision that there was malice aforethought
because appellants allegedly beat deceased continuously for three
hours. The two learned counsel contend, correctly in our opinion,
that there is no evidence proving that the appellants beat the
deceased continuously from 7:00pm to 10:00pm till he died. Mr.
Tiishekwa cited a number of authorities including Halsburry's Laws
of England, 3'd Ed, Vol. 10 para. 135 and Attomey General for N,
lreland v" Gallagher
119611
SALLER 299. Mr. Mubiru relied on,
inter alia, Ryan v" Fildes
119381
3 ALLER 517 and R. v" Maloney
[19851
in support of his submissions. Mr. Tiishekwa's authorities
refer to the law on malice aforethought before our S. 186 was
modified in 1970 by Act No. 29 of 1970.
The learned Principal State Attorney supported the opinions of both
the learned trial Judge and the learned Justices of the Court of
Appeal. She relied on S. 191 of the Penal Code Act and submitted
that in this case malice aforethought was proved because the first
appellant beat the deceased continuously from 7:00pm to 10:00pm,
the time when PW2, claimed to have found the two appellants
assaulting the deceased. The learned Principal State Attorney also
cited Tubere S/O Ochen [19451 12 EACA 63 and B. Lutwama & 4
Others Vs Uqanda
-
Sup. Ct Cr. Appeal 38 of 1989. First we
think that these two cases are distinguishable on the facts. With the
greatest respect to the learned Principal State Attorney, the learned
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trial Judge and the learned Justices of the Court of Appeal, in our
opinion there is no evidence to support the view that the appellants,
leave alone the 2nd appellant, assaulted the deceased continuously
for three hours from 07:00pm to 10:00pm on the basis of which the
two courts concluded that malice aforethought had been established
beyond reasonable doubt. lt is well established that in criminal
cases, the burden of proof is on the prosecution: This is particularly
so in murder cases. See inter alia, Manyara SlO Malakoni v" Reg.
F9551
22 E.A.CA. 502 and Obar S/o Nyarongo v" Reg
t195g[
Zz
EACA 422. ln homicide cases, where death is caused by the use
of a nonlethal weapon, the inference of malice is much less readily
drawn than where a lethalweapon is used: See Yoweri Damulirav"
R.
U9561
23 E.A.C.A. 501. ln the present case the foilowing
passage shows how the learned trial judge
concluded that malice
aforethought had been probed beyond reasonable doubt.
PW2 told court that A1 hit him several times at 07:00pm and on his
retum at 10:00pm, he found A1 and A2 beating the deceased and
the two continued even when the boy was no longer responding to
the pain. A1 told a lie when she sard the deceased was hit only
twice. PW4 the doctor who examined the body of Mafabi told court
that the body had suslarned multiple bruises and cuts on the chest,
abdomen, back, legs and arms. lt was bleeding in the mouth and
had a broken neck. fwo /ashes could not have caused all these
injuries; they were all over the body. They were in front and behind.
The poor boy must have been beaten randomly as he turned around.
He susfalned injuries not only twice but several times and in att
p/aces indicating that the accused were not only disciplining him.
The fact they continued to heat him even when he was
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motionless is proof that it was not mere domestic chastisement. lt
was beating intended fo cause grievous harm and death.
lndeed beating in the abdomen and neck which are valuable pafis of
the body only spelt malice aforethought. The many time he was
beaten exhumed malice aforethought. The long hours of assaulf
all emitted nothing but malice aforethought. The joint beating of
a 14 year old boy by two grown up women spelt malice
aforethought.
I therefore find that the prosecution has proved beyond reasonable
doubt that Mafabi died unlaMully at the hands of the two accused
persons with malice aforethought. As malice aforethoughi fhrs is
the mental element of the accused at the time they caused the death
of the deceased. ln absence of direct evidence, it can be deducted
from circumstantial evidence, like the weapon used, the area
beaten, how many times and how long and with what impact.
We note with respect that the learned trialjudge misdirected himself
on the evidence. First he incorrectly states that PW2 testified that at
07:00pm Al hit the deceased several times whereas PW2 is
recorded as saying he "found Al beating the deceased". As regards
medical evidence, the learned judge states there were cuts on the
body. The doctor did not at all mention cuts anywhere on the body of
the deceased. The doctor's opinion is that he did not know what
caused the injuries. ln our opinions the learned trial judge
concluded that malice aforethought had been proved beyond
reasonable doubt because he assumed erroneously that the
deceased sustained cuts and that there was continuous beating by
Al from 07:00p.m. to 10:00p.m. Further more in view of the
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provisions of section 186 (now 191)of Penal Code Act, the leamed
trial judge erred when he held that beating was intended to cause
grievous harm and death.
ln confirming the conviction, the Court of Appeal stated [at
page I of
its typed judgmentl that rn our view, the appellant
[A1] admits
she
could have caused the injuries PW4, the doctor, found on the body of
the deceased. We accept evidence of PW2 as the learned trialjudge
did. The 1't appellant assaulted her young brother for over three
hours and continued doing so even after he had collapsed. He
eventually died of beating. Given the time the assau/t took and the
vulnerable pads of the body that were targeted, we have no doubt
that she intended to do grievous harm or to kill the deceased.
That is exactly what is required to
prove malice aforethought ln fhis case. ln our
judgment, the learned
trailjudge was right in convicting the l"t appellant of murder.
With the greatest respect, like the learned trial Judge, the learned
Justices of the Court of Appeal erred when they held that the 1st
appellant "intended to do grievous harm or to kill" in the light of the
provisions of section 191 of the Penal Code Act. The section reads
as follows :
S.r9r. Malice aforethought shall be deemed to be established
by evidence proving either of the following
circumstances;
a) "an
intention to cause the death of any person,
whether such person is actually killed or not; or
b) knowledge that the act or omission causing
death will probably cause the death of some
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With regard to A2 the Court of Appeal stated,
Lastly, we consider whether the prosecution proved beyond
reasonable doubt that the ld appellant caused the death of the
deceased with malice aforethought. We have already said that we
accept the evidence of PW2, a real brother of the ld appeltant that
she pafticipated in the beating of the deceased in his final moments
of his life. Both appellants were holding sticks. According to the
uzlfness:-
"The sticks were bigger than my thumb. They were a meter
long. They were both holding each a stick and beating the
boy."
tn our
judgment the
ld appetlant does not appear to have assau/ted
the deceased for as long as l"t appellant did, yet this evidence
shows that she assau/ted the deceased with one meter long stick
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person, whether such person is the person
actually killed or not, although such knowledge
is accompanied by indifference whether death is
caused or not or by a wish that it may not be
caused".
The court ignored A1's statement that she inflicted only two strokes
by stating that she admitted to have caused the injuries which PW4
saw. Further, like the learned trial judge, the Court of Appeal
erroneously assumed that Al assaulled the deceased continuously
for three hours.
and continued to do so even when it was apparent that the deceased
was dying.
The court does nof show in what way the ld appeltant alteged
assau/fs contributed to the death of the diseased.
1O of 16
The learned Justices of Appeal erred in assuming that at 10:00pm
the beating by A2 was continuous for a long time. lndeed the
question when exactly did the 2nd appellant join the beating, if at all,
was not considered. See; Dracaku Afia and Another v" Uganda
[fg63l
E.A 363 where a conviction for murder was reduced to
assault occasioning actual bodily harm because of absence of
evidence of common intension. The question of common intension
was not settled in as much as the doctor's opinion that death was
caused by broken neck of the deceased. The question then is;
whose blow caused the death and at what stage was it
administered?
PW2 claimed the size of the sticks was that of his thumb. Since we
have no evidence regarding the size of his thumb, its size is any
body's guess. Secondly, and if we may repeat, there is no evidence
whatsoever proving A1 assaulted the deceased continuously from
07:00pm until 10:00pm as assumed by both the trial judge
and the
Court of Appeal. With great respect to the PSA, the learned trial
judge and the Justice of the Court of Appeal, we have not seen any
piece of evidence suggesting that A1 alone beat deceased
continuously from 07:00pm till 10:00pm. Nor is there evidence to
show that 42 joined 41 earlier in the beating of the deceased
continuously with A1 till he died. As we have already mentioned the
only direct evidence is that of PW2.
According to the evidence of PW2, at 07:00pm he found A1
chastising the deceased on ground that the deceased had stolen her
money. PW2 does not indicate how many blows were inflicted at
that time. PW2 did not consider the assault serious enough
because he thought it was taken as a disciplinary measure. That is
why he decided to go to town to sell his coffee. lf the beating was
serious, or, if PW2 considered the beating to be serious at that time,
we would expect him, a step brother of the two, to have gone
immediately to the deceased's mother or some authority to report the
beating as he did later at 10:00pm.
Most importantly, after 07:00pm, when PW2 left the scene, there is
no evidence indicating that A1 either alone or
jointly with A2
beat the
deceased until PW2 returned to the scene at 10:00pm. Medical
evidence shows that there were multiple bruises on the body. Post
mortem describes the cause of death as cord compression from
broken neck. ln court, PW4, the doctor, stated that the injuries he
saw "were from assault. I cannot recall what sort of weapon
could have been used". The doctor's evidence on the cause of the
death is not as conclusive as it should be. lt appears to be
somewhat speculation. Thus during cross examination, the doctor
stated
-
"The head compression was apparent because even after 24
hours, the head could be turned freely. The bones in the neck
were broken. I did not establish how the neck was broken".
11 of 16
Furthermore even if the medical evidence that the deceased
sustained a broken neck is accepted, it does not clearly prove that
the two together broke the neck. The neck could have been broken
due to a fall during the struggle. There is no evidence proving that
A2 arrived at the scene before the deceased's neck broke. ln the
light of the ambiguous nature of the evidence of PW2 we cannot say
the deceased sustained broken neck out of the assault by either or
both of the appellants. The nearest evidence suggesting how the
deceased's neck could have got broken is the statement by A1 that
as A2 separated the two, the deceased felldown.
ln these circumstances our opinion is that the prosecution failed to
establish beyond reasonable doubt the important element of malice
aforethought. This court and its predecessors have considered what
amounts to malice aforethought and how it can be proved. See.'
Bukenya & Others V" Uganda[19721 EA 549, Francis Ocoke V"
12 of 16
ln her defence, A1 admits that she assaulted the deceased and that
she did that after the deceased, who was a much younger brother,
had insulted her by stating that 41 had no husband and that the
pregnancy she had was in effect a result of her loose morals. She
stated that the deceased charged at her and bit her breast. We
would also point out that usually in Uganda; suspects are examined
by medical personnel soon after arrest. There is no evidence
proving that 41 was examined by a medical person as is the
practice. There is no evidence to challenge her claim that the
deceased charged at her and bit her breast. Thus the 1't appellant
appeared to have been provoked.
Uganda
[1992
-93] HCB 43 and Joseph Rujumbura V" Uganda
[1992 -
93] HCB 36.
ln the Case oI Francis Ocoke VrUganda
[Supr{;
the facts were as
follows:
On 13th January, 1981, the deceased was travelling on a tractor
which was pulling a trailer in which two of his wives were sitting.
The deceased was sifting on the left side mudguard of the
tractor. At Nile U on Lira / Soroti road, an army Tata Lorry
being driven by the appellant who was a soldier, came at a
terrific speed and knocked the trailer disconnecting it from the
tractor. The lorry then hit the right side of the tractor and
disconnecting it from the tractor. The appellant stopped the
lorry and reversed it between the tractor and the trailer and run
over the deceased rbs fhus crushing him to death. The
appellant panicked and run away with one of his passengers
[DW2] leaving the body
of the deceased lying under the lorry.
The appellant went away with the deceased's cap and handbag
and passed at a house of
[PWI]
where he asked hrs passenger
whether it was really the deceased who had died and the reply
was in the affirmative. The appellant's defence was that the
deceased was killed by accident. He denied knowing the
deceased or intending to kill him. The learned trial
judge
believed the prosecution case and held that the appellant killed
the deceased with malice aforethought. He rejected the
appellant defence of accident and convicted him of murder.
On appeal it was held by the predecessor to this Court, inter alia,
that:
13 of 16
The court quashed the conviction for murder but convicted him of
manslaughter.
ln the case of Joseph Rujumba Vs Uganda
lSupral
the facts were
these
-
The appellant was convicted of murder and sentenced to death.
The appellant, a youth of between 18 and 20 years of age,
used a stick in jabbing
or poking his mother on the upper part of
the abdomen. The trialjudge found that the stick used to cause
death was blunt object or smooth surface and that such was
the object that led to the blow which caused injuries that led to
the deceased's death. lt was not known how heavy the stick
used actually was and the trialjudge came to one finding, that
14 of 16
A postmorlem repoft contains findings as to the state of the
body the injuries found on it, and an opinion as fo the cause of
death. lt is not capable by itself of proving malice aforethought,
the existence of which is not a question of opinion but of fact to
be determined from all the available evidence. We hold
therefore that the trial judge was not justified in finding
that malice aforethought had been esfab/ished beyond
reasonable doubt from the evidence of the medical Dr. Odongo.
Malice aforethought could not be inferred merely because the
deceased was crashed in the ribs by the motor vehicle. The
test that malice aforethought can be inferred from part of the
body inflicted by the appellant's act is restricted fo cases where
a weapon particularly a stick has been used to commit a
homicide.
the intent was to cause grievous harm. The predecessor to
this court held:
1, An intent fo cause harm no longer consfifutes
an element in establishing malice aforethought.
The evidence recorded in the instant case, was
not such as to warrant the inference of the
intention to murder or of knowledge that the
blow could probahly cause death. lt was
unusual result from such a blow and that being
fhe case there was not the requisite mens rea
for murder within the wording of 5.186 of the
Penal Code.
2. There should always be evidence that weapon
that was used to cause death was described to
the Doctor or was actually observed hy the
Doctor who performed the postmortem
examination, and in whose opinion, the weapon
was consistent with the nature and the time of
the assault and its effect on the deceased, if that
is truth. lt was not simply that the injuries
were caused by a bunt object, but that the blunt
object in the case could have been used fo
cause the injuries, in the way it was alleged to
have been used. This u/as important in
estimating the mens rea of an accused.
ln the present case both the two courts misdirected themselves on
ingredients of malice aforethought. We are satisfied that had the
15 of l6
learned trial judge and the learned justices considered the provisions
of S.191[former S.186] of the Penal Code Act, they would probably f,{
have convicted the appellants of the murder.
Consequently, we quash the conviction for murder and acquit the two
appellants of the offence of murder. We convict each of them of
manslaughter C/S 187 and 190 of the Penal Code Act. We shall
hear submissions in mitigation before passing sentences.
red at Kampata this
VLf
C
\,v&rroro. Deli *, day
J do
Chie ustice
ekooko
Justice of the Supreme Court
/z.
/.
L tt.
)
"
.i k4"
Justi 6 of the Supreme Court
J.T umwes e
Justice of Supreme Court
E.M. Kisaakye
Justice of the Supreme Court
/
16 of 16
ar4
B.M. Katureebe
%
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