Case Law[2003] UGSC 63Uganda
Kabwiso Issa v Uganda (Criminal Appeal No.7 of 2002) [2003] UGSC 63 (27 October 2003)
Supreme Court of Uganda
Judgment
\
THE REPUBLIC OF UGANDA
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF UGANDA
AT MENGO
(coRAM: ODER, TSEKOOKO, KAROKORA,
KANYETHAMBA AND KATO,J.J.S.C).
CRIMINAL APPEAL No.7 OF 2002
BETWEEN
KABWISO ISSA eppelrffr
VERSUS
UGANDA RESPONDENT
(Appeal from the Judgment of the Court of Appeal at Kampala.(Mukasa-
kixonyogo, DCJ, OkeTlo and Mpagi - Bahigeine, JJA) dated zoh December,2001 in
Criminal Appeal No.81 ot 2000)
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT
This is a second appeal arising from the decision of the Court of Appeal
which confirmed the conviction by the High Court of the appellant for the
offence of defilement C/S 123 (1) of the Penal Code Act.
It was the case for the Prosecution in the High Court that on 911211995, al
Bukasa Village, Zirobwe, Luwero District, the appellant - Kabwiso lssa
defiled Bazara Suzan (PW2), a girl under the age of 18 years.
1
I
The facts accepted by the courts below are simple. The appellant was
employed as a herds man and lived in the home of Mukiibi Karoli (PW3),
the father of the victim of the defilement. On 911211995 at 8'30 a'm, Mukiibi
asked Bazara to accompany the appellant to tend
cattle in a swamp called
Namuraga Plain. The swamp is 6 miles away. The two took out the cattle
to the plain at 10.00 a.m. while in the plain the appellant teased Bazara to
the effect that he would give her 25 strokes on her buttocks for insulting
him.Hethengaveheronestroke,gotholdofBazara,threwhertothe
ground and defiled her. Because of pain, Bazara cried out. she bled and
as a result blood stains remained where she had been defiled. she ran
home and reported the defilement to her father. The father and Budalla, a
neighbour, went to the scene accompanied by Bazara' The appellant was
found in the vicinity of the scene of the crime and when confronted with
Bazara's complaint, he denied defiling her. PW.2 took her father and
Budalla to the scene where the group saw fresh blood stains on the
ground. when PW.2, her father and Budalla returned to where appellant
was left tending cattle, they realised that the appellant had disappeared.
PW3 drove the cattle home before he reported the incident to Zirobwe
police
Post. ln the evening of the same day, the appellant reported to
PW3's home and apologised to PW3 for having defiled Bazara'
Subsequenily, PW.2 was examined by medical personnel who confirmed
that she had been defiled. The appellant was arrested and charged with
the offence of defilement. At the trial, the appellant gave unsworn brief
statement in his defence. He simply said that he remembered sbme of the
events of 911211995 but did not mention them. He claimed that prior to that
date, he had worked for PW3 for four months for which PW3 had failed to
pay him his wages amounting to 80,000/= and because of that, PW3 had
planted this case on him. The assessors rejected this story. so did the
2
learned trial
judge who convicted the appellant and sentenced him to 15
years imprisonment. The appellant appealed to the court of Appeal which
dismissed the appeal. He has now appealed to us. The appeal is based
on two grounds:
The first ground of appeal is couched this way by Mr. Bwengye, counsel for
the appellant:
The learned Jusfices of the Court of Appeal erred in law when they
confirmed the appeltant's conviction of defilement and sentence of 15
years imprisonment basing on verbal confession purportedly made
by the appetlant to the complainant's (victim's) father, PW3, whereas
the trial judge did not consider fhis confession as corroborative
material necessary to support conviction of the appellant, thus
occasioning a miscarriage of iustice.
Clearly this ground offends nule/ a1(1) of the Rules of this Court in that it is
argumentative and narrative. Be that as it may, Mr. Bwengye contended
that in convicting the appellant the trial judge did not rely on the appellant's
confession to PW.3 yet the Court of Appeal relied on it; that S.25 of the
Evidence Act prohibits admissibility in evidence of this kind of confession
and he cited
&teiha
Deo Vs. Uqanda Criminal Appeal No.
'129
of 2001
(C.A) (unreported) in support. Mr. Wagona, Principal State Attorney,
supported the decisions of the Courts below, contending that apart from the
confession there was other cogent evidence to support the conviction. We
do not quite appreciate Mr. Bwengye's submission that the trial judge never
relied on appellant's confession to convict him whereas the Court of Appeal
relied on it. ln our opinion there is nothing wrong in the course adopted by
the Court of Appeal. Mr. Bwengye did not give any reasons for his strange
3
view that section 25 of Evidence Act forbids admission in evidence of
appellant,s confession to the father of the complainant. The section reads.
'A confession made by an accused person is irrelevant if
the making of the confession appears to the court, having
regard to the state of mind of the accused person, and to
atl the circumstances, to have been caused by any
violence, force, threats, inducement or promise calculated
in the opinion of the court to cause an untrue confession fo
be made'.
Kataiha's case (supra), itself a decision of the Court of Appeal, is clearly
distinguishable on many aspects but the relevant one is that there, the
appellant's confession was excluded because members of the Local
Defence Unit (LDUs) extracted it after tying up the appellant Kataiha and
threatened him with a gun.
ln this case, there was overwhelming evidence against the appellant. He
had been in the company of Bazara when they went out to tend cattle.
After he ravished Bazara, she reported this to her father who went to the
scene and found the appellant nearby. After PW3 confronted the
appellant with Bazara's report instead of responding properly, the appellant
first fled the scene abandoning cattle in the field but only to return in the
evening and confess his sin to PW.3, the father of the victim.
ln our opinion, and with respect to Mr. Bwengye, there is nothing in the
provisions of section 25, which in this case would prohibit admissibility of
the appellant's verbal confession to PW.3. The Court of Appeal was fully
entitled to treat the said confession as evidence that corroborative of the
complainant's testimony. Even if the trial judge did not directly refer to the
4
confession, he treated the conduct of the appellant at the scene when he
ran away as conduct inconsistent with his innocence. Therefore ground
one of the appeal must fail for lack of merit.
The complaint in the second ground is that the trial Judge did not follow the
provisions of Clause (8) of Article 23 of the Constitution when he sentenced
the appellant to 15 years. Mr. Bwengye asked us to reduce the sentence to
7 years. On the other hand, Mr. Wagona, quite properly in our view,
conceded that the words which the learned trial judge used when imposing
the sentence of imprisonment are ambiguous. When imposing the
sentence the learned trial judge expressed himself this way -
".........he is sentenced to 15 years imprisonment. The
period he has been on remand shall be taken into account
against the whole sentence"
ln the Court of Appeal, the complaint against the sentence was that it was
excessive. That Court did not agree. The complaint before us, in effect, is
that it is unlawful in that it contravenes Clause (8) of Article 23 of the
Constitution. The Clause states: -
"Where a person is convicted and sentenced to a term of
imprisonment for an offence, any period he or she spends
in lawful custody in respect of the offence before the
completion of his or her trial shall be taken into account in
imposing the term of imprisonment"
This court has on a number of occasions construed this clause to mean in
effect that the period which an accused person spends in lawful custody
before completion of the trial should be taken into account specifically
along with other relevant factors before the court pronounces the term to be
5
For the foregoing reasons, the appeal against conviction is dismissed while
the appeal against sentence is allowed. The sentence of 15 years imposed
by the trialjudge is set aside.
We think that the trial judge intended to sentence the appellant to
imprisonment for ten (10) years. This period will run from 291912000, the
date the trial judge imposed the 15 years sentence.
We understand that prison authorities experience difficulties in determining
remission periods in cases where convicts are sentenced in terms similar to
the words used by the trialjudge in this case. We would therefore give the
following guidelines to trial courts. When sentencing a person to
imprisonment a trial judge or magistrate should say-
' Taking into account the period o years (months
or weeks whichever is applicable) which the accused has
already spenf in remand, I now sentence the accused to a
term of..................., years (montfis or uveeks, as the case
may be)'
ln such an event the sentence imposed shall be definite and be treated as
excluding the period spent in custody on remand.
served. ln the appeal before us it is not clear how the period from 9112195
lo 29l9t2OQ(5 years) spent on remand "will be taken into account against
the whole sentence" of 15 years. lt appears the judge
meant that the
sentence commenced 'from 9112195. This would be absurd because a trial
court can not sentence a person before conviction. We accordingly allow
ground two.
6
,
we direct that this judgment be circulated to all courts, prosecutors and
prison authorities for guidance.
day of 2003.
,,L
at en
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A.H.O. ODER
JUSTICE OF SUPREME COURT
J.W. EKOOKO
JUSTICE OF SUPREME COURT
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A.N. KAROKORA
JUSTICE OF SUPREME COURT
.KANYEIHAMBA
JUSTICE OF SUPREME COURT
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C.M. KATO
JUSTICE OF SUPREME COURT
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47
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