IN THE HIGH COURT OF MALAWI
PRINCIPAL REGISTRY
CONFIRMATION CASE NUMBER 489
OF 2000
THE REPUBLIC
VERSUS
KEYALA NALUMO
AND
WILLY DICKSON
From the First Grade Magistrate Court at Limbe
Criminal Case No. 223 of 1999
CORAM: D F
MWAUNGULU(JUDGE)
Chimwaza, Principal State
Advocate, for the State
Defendant, absent,
unrepresented
Kachimanga, Official Court
Interpreter
Mwaungulu, J
JUDGEMENT
This matter was set down by
the Honourable Mr. Justice Hanjahanja to consider the sentence. The Limbe first
grade magistrate sentenced the defendants to four years imprisonment with hard
labour for each count of burglary and theft. Burglary and theft are offences
under section 309 and 278 of the Penal Code, respectively. The reviewing judge
wanted the sentences reduced. The First Grade Magistrate sentenced the
defendant on 12th February, 2000. The record does not show when the record was
sent to this Court. The record does not show as well when the matter was
received by this Court. The judge made the order to set down the matter on 7th
July, 2000, five months after the lower court’s sentence. It is unclear when
the matter was sent to the judge.
The matter was not set down
for the whole of 1999. The record was looked into on 15th August, this year,
more than a year after the judge’s order to set down. On 15th August, 2000 the
Registrar set the case down for hearing for today the 1st September, 2000.
Under section 15(4) of the Criminal Procedure and Evidence Code the Registrar should
have set the case for before 12th February, 2000. Prison authorities could only
keep the defendant up to that date.
In the last few years the
review system in our criminal justice system has strained. It is necessary,
therefore, to rationalise, and restate the law and practice and duties arising
from the statutory provisions. The lay magistracy in Malawi handles close to
90% of the criminal load at first instances. The lay magistracy undergoes a
basic training equipping them with some aspects of substantive and procedural
law and the law of evidence. The clerk to the court, unlike in the United
kingdom, is not a solicitor, in our context, a legal practitioner. In the
United kingdom, lay magistrates, who sit in numbers more than one, are advised
by the clerk to the court, who is a solicitor. The difficulties we have in
recruiting professional magistrates mean that we cannot afford to have our lay magistrates advised by a
legal practitioner. The review mechanisms under the Courts Act and the Criminal
Procedure and Evidence Code becomes important.
The review mechanism in
criminal proceedings essentially refers to the right of appeal under the
Criminal Procedure and Evidence Code and review procedure under the Courts Act
and the Criminal Procedure and Evidence Code. The right to appeal in criminal
proceedings is entrenched by statute, section 361 of the Criminal Procedure and
Evidence Code. The right exists in most democracies to which this country
belongs. The right may be truncated for expedience and cost. The right however
has not been taken away by legislation. The review mechanism in the Criminal
Procedure and Evidence Code complements the right of appeal.
The power of review in
criminal proceedings is in two provisions in the Courts Act. Section 25 provides:
“The High Court shall exercise
powers of review in respect of criminal proceedings and matters in subordinate
courts in accordance with the law for the time being in force relating to
criminal procedure.”
Section 26 provides:
“(1) In addition to the powers conferred upon the High Court by this
or any other Act, the High Court shall have general supervisory and revisionary
jurisdiction over all subordinate courts and may, in particular, but without
prejudice to the generality of the foregoing provision, if it appears desirable
in the interests of justice, either of its own motion or at the instance of any
party or person interested at any stage in any matter or proceeding, whether
civil or criminal, in any subordinate court, call for the record thereof and
may remove the same into the High Court or may give to such subordinate court
directions as to the further conduct of the same as justice may require.
(2) Upon the High Court calling for any record under subsection
(1), the matter or proceeding in question shall be stayed in the subordinate
court pending the further order of the High Court.”
Section 26 is a general
supervisory and superintendency provision applicable to criminal matters still
pending in subordinate courts. It has to be read with sections 70, 74 and 75 of
the Criminal Procedure and Evidence Code. The power of review that concerns us
is the review of decisions by magistrates at first instances. That power is
underlined by section 26 of the Courts Act and adumbrated by the Criminal
Procedure and Evidence Code.
The paramount provision is
section 362(1) of the Criminal Procedure and Evidence Code:
“In the case of a proceeding
in a subordinate court the record of which has been called for or which has
been forwarded under section 361, or which otherwise comes to its knowledge,
the High Court, by way of review, may exercise the same powers as are conferred
upon it on appeal by section 353 (2) (a), (b) and ( c) and by section 356.”
The courts interpret the words ‘otherwise comes to its
knowledge’ generously. The words cover
where this Court calls for the file under section 360 and confirms sentences
under section 15. Under this generous
interpretation this Court has accepted requests on letters from defendants or
anyone raising a matter concerning the justice of the case, such as a newspaper
report. Where there has been some
injustice, this Court has allowed, under this magnanimous interpretation, the
State’s representations on the sentence and, albeit rarely, conviction.
Under section 362 of the
Criminal Procedure and Evidence Code this Court has the same powers as on
appeal. Section 353 (2) of the Criminal Procedure and Evidence Code provides:
“After perusing such record
and, in the case of an appeal by the Director of Public Prosecutions, after
hearing him, if he appears, and the respondent or his counsel, if he appears,
or, in the case of any other appeal, hearing the appellant or his counsel, if
he appears, and the Director of Public Prosecutions, if he appears, the Court
may, if it considers that there is not sufficient ground for interfering,
dismiss the appeal, or may-
(a) in an appeal by any
aggrieved person from a conviction-
( I) reverse the finding and sentence, and acquit or discharge
the accused, or order him to be tried by a court of competent jurisdiction, or
commit him for trial, or direct that he be retried; or
( ii) alter the finding, maintaining the sentence, or, with or
without altering the finding, reduce or increase the sentence; or
( iii) with or without such reduction or increase and with or
without altering the finding, alter the nature of the sentence;
(b) in an appeal any aggrieved
person from any other order, alter or reverse such order;
( c) in an appeal by the
Director of Public Prosecutions from a finding of acquittal
( I) if the finding of
acquittal was arrived at without the defence having been called, remit the case
to the subordinate court with a direction to proceed with the trial and to call
on the defence;
( ii) in any other case,
convert the finding of acquittal into one of conviction and either make an
order under sections 337, 338 or 339 or pass sentence or remit the case to the
subordinate court for sentence,
and in any of the cases
mentioned in this subsection the Court may make any amendment or any
consequential or incidental order that may appear just and proper.”
Under this provision, this
Court, on review, can alter a conviction or sentence passed by a subordinate
court at first instances. This Court has therefore altered convictions into
acquittal or entered alternative verdicts. This Court however does not acquittals
into convictions. This Court proceeds on that the state should appeal against
acquittals. Under this provision it does not matter whether the defendant is
offending a second time.
The usual way in which this
Court exercises its reviewing power is through the mandatory provisions of
section 15 of the Criminal Procedure and Evidence Code. Under the section, an
immediate prison sentence on a first offender, a fine exceeding K100 and two
years, one year, six months and three months imprisonment by, respectively, a
Resident, First, Second or Third Grade
Magistrate, must be confirmed by this Court. Consequently, for imprisonment of
less than two years, one year, six months and three months by, respectively, a Resident,
First, Second or Third Grade Magistrate, on a subsequent offender need
not be confirmed by this Court. These matters would come to this Court though
what is in the preceding paragraph. Section 15 of the Criminal Procedure and
Evidence Code provides:
“(1) Where in any proceedings a subordinate court -
(a) imposes a sentence or corporal punishment;
(b) imposes a fine exceeding K100;
© imposes any sentence of imprisonment
exceeding -
(I) in the case of a Resident Magistrate’s
court, two years;
(
ii) in the case of a court of a
magistrate of the first or second grade, one year; or
(iii) in the case of a court magistrate of the
fourth grade, six months; and
(iv) in the case of a court of a magistrate of
the fourth grade, three months.
(d) imposes any sentence of imprisonment upon
a first offender which is not suspended under section 340, it shall forthwith
transmit the record of such proceedings to the High Court in order that the
High Court may exercise in respect thereof the powers of review conferred by
Part XIII.
(2) No officer in charge of a prison or other person authorized by any warrant or order to carry out any
sentence of corporal punishment falling within subsection (1) (a) shall do so,
either wholly or in part, until he has received notification from the High
Court that it has in exercise of its powers of appeal or review confirmed such
sentences.
(3) No person authorized by warrant or order to levy any fine
falling within subsection (1) (b), and no person authorized by any warrant for
the imprisonment of any person in default of the payment of such fine, shall
execute or carry out any such warrant or order until he has received
notification from the High Court that it has in exercise of its powers of
appeal or review confirmed the imposition of such fine.
(4) An officer in charge of a prison or other person authorized by a
warrant of imprisonment to carry out any sentence of imprisonment falling
within subsection (1) ( c) (I), (ii) of (iii) shall treat such warrant as
though it had been issued in respect of a period of two years, one year or six
months respectively, as the case may be, until such time as he shall receive
notification from the High Court that it has in exercise of its powers of
appeal or review confirmed that such sentence may be carried out as originally
imposed.
(5) Nothing in this section contained shall affect or derogate
from the powers of the High Court to reverse, set side, alter or otherwise deal
with any sentence of a subordinate court on review or appeal.
(6) When a subordinate court has passed a sentence or made an order falling within subsection (1) it
shall endorse on the warrant or order that the sentence or order is one
required to be submitted to the High Court for review and which part if any of
the sentence or order may be treated as valid and effective pending such review.
(7) In this section “sentence of imprisonment” means a substantive
sentence of imprisonment or a sentence of imprisonment in default of payment of
fine, costs or compensation or a combination of such sentences and includes a
sentence of imprisonment the operation of which is suspended under section
339.”
While under the provisions
just considered the review mechanism is other driven, the mechanism in section
15 of the Criminal Procedure and Evidence Code is court driven. The section
imposes a duty on the lower court to transmit the record to this Court speedily
for this Court to review the sentence under the powers in the Criminal
Procedure and Evidence Code and the Court’s Act. Equally, there is a duty on this Court to review the sentence as
soon as possible. To reenforce the policy the Criminal Procedure and Evidence
Code provides that, if this Court does not exercise the powers, prison
authorities can only keep the prisoner for up to two years, one year, six
months and three months for a sentence imposed by a Resident Magistrate, First
Grade, Second Grade and Third Grade magistrate, respectively. Speed, therefore,
is important. Courts, lower and this Court, must act timeously because the
review mechanism under section 15 of
the Criminal Procedure and Evidence Code is court driven.
There are good reasons why the
categories of sentences in section 15 of the Criminal Procedure and Evidence
Code should be confirmed. For first offenders, it is the policy of the law that
first offenders should be sent to prison for good reasons (section 340 of the
Criminal Procedure and Evidence Code). In Republic v Matindi, 1976 (CC
No. 1699), Jere, J., said :
“The philosophy behind this
legislation is that first offenders should be kept out of prison because
contact with hardened criminals might have a bad influence on them, and,
secondly, they should be given a chance to mend their ways but with an areal
threat that if they commit another offence during the period, the suspended
sentence will be revived. In this way, therefore, the suspended sentence
provides an incentive to first offenders to keep the law.”
Equally monetary penalties
should be checked for reasonableness and fairness. There is a risk of
imprisonment in default. Imprisonment for monetary penalties is looked at
grudgingly by the legislature and courts. The Criminal Procedure and Evidence
Code answers the matter in two ways. It requires a fine of above K100 to be
confirmed by this Court. It also stops enforcement of a default sentence until
the fine has been confirmed by this Court.
The law allows imprisonment,
without necessity of review, of repeat offenders to imprisonment of only up to
two years, one year six months and three months for a Resident, First Grade,
Second Grade and Third Grade magistrate, respectively. The legislature must
have considered prison sentences above these levels serious enough to require
review by this Court.
There are an underlying policy
consideration and purpose for all instances where the legislature required a
review of the sentence imposed. Those ends are not achieved by actions that
disregard timeous transmission of records to this Court, placement of records
before a judge, consideration of those cases by a judge and setting down by
this Court of matters that the judge ordered to be set down. Sometimes problems
arise after the case is set down.
Three situations could occur
after the case has been set down. The first is that the judge is not available.
That should not happen. First, because, such cases involve the liberty of a
citizen. A person serving sentence, even if the conviction is right, retains
all his basic rights. One such right is his right to a speedy trial or criminal
process. Secondly, the non-availability of a judge at a given time undermines
access to justice. A day lost for determination of a case means the case is
pushed to a time when another citizen’s rights would have been determined. An
adjournment of necessity affects the access to justice of those whose rights
could have been determined on the appointed date. There is no remedy to this
except to establish a system where a judge is always available to handle cases
when set down.
The second scenario is that
neither of the parties is served. If the parties are absent and they were
served, the court has to consider making the order. None of the parties are
entitled to be heard when this Court is exercising its powers of review. The
Criminal Procedure and Evidence Code only proscribes making an order adverse to
the defendant. This Court therefore can make an order not favourable to the
state. It can, although it is advisable to ensure that the state is heard or at
the least given an opportunity to be heard, acquit the defendant.
The practice has been to give the
state an opportunity to be heard. Usually the state has been heard. The state
has however at times chosen not to be heard and told the court to proceed
accordingly. Consequently, this Court has proceeded without the state. This has
been extremely useful in disposing simple matters. It should be encouraged.
Where the State has not appeared the judge has to exercise the discretion after
regarding the purposes and goals in the review provisions just considered.
The last scenario is that this
Court has not set the cases timeously. This is what happened here. This can
cause injustice to the defendant and the justice system. The matters to
consider when setting the matters down are laid down in Republic v Menard,
Conf Cas. No. 951 of 2000, unreported:
“The Registrar, when setting
the case down for 3rd August, 2000, should have regarded the judge’s actual
directions, section 15 (4) of the Criminal Procedure and Evidence Code and
section 107 of the Prison Act.”
Apart from one aspect to be considered
shortly, this was a simple trespass to the dwelling house. This however is a
case where courts are basically targeting the basic mental element of the crime. Heavy sentences are justified
because courts want to discourage offenders from contemplating to break into
dwelling houses to commit felonies. In targeting the mental element, courts
will therefore increase the sentence to reflect that more minds were involved
in the criminal scheme. There is more threat to society when people choose to
act in concert to commit crimes. Beyond this the sentence will be enhanced
where the trespass, the breaking and entry, was accompanied by violence or
large damage to the premises. Similarly, the sentence will be enhanced if there
was actual disturbance to residents. The Court may have to consider the
circumstances of the victim. For example, a burglar should expect unkindness if
the victim is young children, elderly people or disabled.
The only aggravating
circumstance was that the defendants acted in concert. There was no disturbance
to the victims. The First Grade Magistrate considered this Court’s decision in Republic
v Chizumila, Conf. Cas. No. 316 of 1994, unreported. The defendant,
however, pleaded guilty. A guilty plea
is a factor, notwithstanding the defendant never raised it, a sentencing court
should consider when determining the sentence.
Courts should encourage guilty pleas.
It is now the established that
guilty pleas should reduce the
possible sentence by a third. (Republic v Mtaya, Con. Cas. No. 98 of
1995, per Mwaungulu J.; Republic v
Mtenje, Con. Cas. No. 133 of 1995 per Mwaungulu J.; Republic v Zuwawo,
Con. Cas. No. 405 of 1996 per Chimasula Phiri J; Republic v Kholoviko,
Con. Cas. No. 434 of 1996 per Ndovi J.) Th sentence of four years on the
burglary charge is set aside. The defendant will serve three years.
The sentence on the theft is
also manifestly excessive. The First Grade Magistrate thought that the amount
of property stolen was considerable. This Court, as pointed out in Republic
v Nambazo, Conf. Cas. No. 643 of 199, unreported, has had to deal with more
property than was involved here. The limitation is the maximum sentence.
Current economic trends reflected in a sinking currency and war time interest
rates and inflation can only mean that sentences have to be reasonably low for
a considerable part of the lower band of the crime. I reduce the sentence to
two years imprisonment with hard labour.
I set aside the four years
imprisonment with hard labour for each offence. If not released under section
15(4) of the Criminal Procedure and Evidence Code, I sentence the defendant to
three years and two years respectively for the burglary and theft.
Made in open Court this 1st
Day of September 2000.
D F Mwaungulu
JUDGE