IN THE HIGH COURT OF MALAWI
PRINCIPAL REGISTRY
CONFIRMATION CASE NUMBER 278
0F 2000
THE REPUBLIC
VERSUS
MISHECK MVALUME
ALFRED CHIKOPA
From the First Grade Magistrtae Court at Balaka
Criminal Case Number 37 of 2000
CORAM: D F
MWAUNGULU, J
The State, Absent
The Defendant, Present and
unrepresented
Kachimanga, Official Court
Interpreter
Mwaungulu, J
JUDGMENT
The judge who reviewed this
matter querried two aspects of the sentence. First, he thought the sentence of
two years imprisonment the First Grade Magistrtae passed for robbery was
manifestly inadequate. Secondly, he questions why the First Grade Magistrate
ordered the three sentences to run consecutively. The First Grade Magistrate
convicted the defendants for two offences of breaking into a building and
committing a felony there and robbery. These are offences under sections 311
and 301, respectively, of the Penal Code. The First Grade Magistrate sentenced
the defendants to two years imprisonment on each of the three counts. He ordered
the sentences to run consecutively. The defendants, therefore have to serve six
years imprisonment. The reviewing judge wants this order considered.
All the three offences the
First Grade Magistrtae convicted the defendants for occurred within five days
between 17th and 21st January 2000. On 17th January, 2000 the defendants broke
and entered Mr Douglas Kalulu’s shop at Mponda Village in Balaka District. They
stole huge quantities of grocery items. The next day it was a robbery on Mrs
Shupekile Lupande. Again quite a haul of property occurred. On 21st January,
2000 it was the turn at Mrs Irene Kondani’s shop. The defendants stole a lot of
property as well. The property was found on them within a short time. They were
selling most of it when the police caught with them.
Their mitigation statements
were not drawn by counsel. The defendants never made the best of it. They
raised domestic concerns. The First Gradae Magistrate, properyly in my view,
never considered them. In Millo v Republic, Crim App No 30 of 2000 this
Court said:
“Sentencers should not
normally consider domestic matters. These are matters offenders should put in
the equation when embarking in conduct society disapproves and enforces with
criminal sanctions. There is a public element in criminal justice not easily
dispelled by domestic considerations. The public interest in the criminal
process would be precariously compromised if courts unduly consider such
matters.”
The First Grade Magistrate, however, considered
mitigating and aggravating circumstances on the record. The First Grade
Magistrate, however, at least for the robbery, underrated the strength of the
aggravating factors and accentuated disproportionately the mitigating factors.
Breaking into a building and
committing a felony therein may not, compared to other offences of the same
genus and others, be as serious. Small
businesses, however, would not afford the huge security costs crimes the
defendants perpetrated imply. The criminal process may be the only insurance.
Courts assure small businesses by imposing appropriate sentences for those
raiding small shops like the complainants’ ones have been shown to be. Moreover
the defendants acted in concert to commit crime. Courts should impose heavier
sentences for those who in concert set out to commit crimes. There is greater
threat to society when people band together to commit crime. Moreover the
defendants committed several offences in a short period. Courts should increase
sentencences to reflect that the defendant has committed more offences. If this
is not done, a man who has committed only one offence, everything being equal,
may be grieved, particularly where the court orders the sentences to run
concurrently, that he will be in prison for the same period as one who
committed more offences albeit in quick succession.
The unfairness is cured by
imposing a heavier sentence for the individual offences to reflect that the
defendant committed more offences and ordering the increased sentences to run
concurrently. The First Grade Magistrate wanted to pass heavier sentences. He
was constrained by that the individual sentences would heve been harsher on the
facts. He therefore opted for shorter sentences which he ordered to run
consecutively. This he could not do. The Court should impose an appropriate
sentence for each offence. The Court must foresee that a defendant can
successfully appeal against conviction on all save one count. A sentence
reduced because a consecutive order appeared appropriate punishment would,
therefore, look unfair if the court decides not to reconsider the sentence.
This is not off the point. The state has no right under our legal system to appeal
against quantum of sentence where there is no legal issue. On the facts, a
concurrent order, as the Reviewing judge thought, was the right course. The
offences were committed by the same defendants in quick succession. They are
related offences. A consecutive order was not apposite.
The First Grade Magistrate
justified his sentences on that the defendants are young offenders who
committed crime for the first time. That may be true for the breaking into a
building and committing a felony threin. For robberies of the kind the
defendants perpetrated in concert and very seriuos crimes sometimes a plea that
the defendants are young or offending for the first time should not be listened
to. Naturally, because they are young and have a bigger future, we feel as
courts that they should be given a chance unless they have really squandered
it. There are timeshowever when justice demands that such considerations should
not influence our minds. If, as here, defendants mark their debut in a life with
pomp, the courts must match their entrance with fanfare. In relation to the
robbery, therefore, the mitigating factors were overplayed and the aggravating
factors underplayed. In Maganizo v Republic, Crim. App. No 5 of 1997
this Court said:
“ I agree entirely with the
observations of Ewbank, J., in the Court of
Appeal in R. -v- Richardson and others, ‘The Times’,
February, 1988. Some crimes, he said,
are so heinous that a plea of youth, a plea
that the crime was a first offence or that the offender had not been to prison before were of little
relevance.”
I agree with
the reviewing judge that the sentence for robbery was manifestly inadequate.
I set aside the sentence for
robbery. The defendants will serve four years imprisonment with hard labour. I
confirm the sentences on the breaking into a building and committing a felony
therein. The consecutive order is set aside. The sentences will run
concurrently.
Made in open Court this 8th
Day of June 2000
D F Mwaungulu
JUDGE