Mugami Mungathi v Republic [2014] KECA 321 (KLR) | Robbery With Violence | Esheria

Mugami Mungathi v Republic [2014] KECA 321 (KLR)

Full Case Text

INTHE COURT  OF APPEAL

AT NAIROBI

(CORAM:  MWERA, G.B.M. KARIUKI& KIAGE, JJ.A.)

CRIMINAL APPEAL NO. 176 OF 2013

BETWEEN

MUGAMI MUNGATHI...........................................APPELLANT

AND

REPUBLIC.....................................................RESPONDENT

(Beingan  appeal against conviction and  sentence of the High Court of

Kenya at Nairobi (Makhandia& Dulu JJ.) delivered 20thApril,2013

in

MACHAKOS H.C.CR.A NO.33OF 2012)

**************

JUDGMENT OF THE COURT

1. Mr.  Mugami Mungathi, the  appellant in  this  appeal, was  on  27th February 2012  convicted by  the  Principal Magistrate Court at Makueni of the  offence of robbery with violence contrary to  Section 296(2) of the  Penal  Code  and  on  23rd   February 2012  was  sentenced to  death. Section  296(2)  of  the   Penal   Code   under  which  he   was   charged, convicted and sentenced provides that:-

“296. (1)Any  person who   commits the felony of robbery is liable to imprisonment for fourteen years.

(2)  If the offenderis  armed with  any   dangerous  or offensive weapon or instrument,  or is  in  company with one  or more other person or persons, or if, at or  immediately  before  or  immediately  after  thetime of the robbery,he  wounds, beats,  strikes or uses  any  other personal violence to any  person, he shall be  sentenced to death.

2. The charge against the  appellant was framed as follows:

“On 11thday of October 2010  at  around 10. 00  p.m.  at Miangeni Market, Miangeni sub-location in  Mbooni East District within Eastern Province being armed with dangerous  weapon namely  metal  bar robbed FELIX KINYAE MUTULA of two mobile phones make Nokia 1208 valued 3,000/=,  Samsung C140 valued Ksh.3,000/=and cash 600/=all  totaling to Ksh.6,600/= and  at the time of such  robbery wounded the said  FELIX KINYAE MUTULA.

3. In the  trial that ensued, evidence of identification of the  appellant was given by the  complainant, Felix Kinae Mutua, (PWI), who  described himself  as  a  businessman  and   testified  that  he   bumped  into the appellant by happen-stance on  11. 10. 2010 at 9. 30  p.m. as  he  went looking for a  friend at a  newly  opened club at Miangeni Market in Miangeni sub-location in Mbooni East District of Eastern Province.  Both walked  to  the club   from the   bus  stage   after  the   complainant  had unloaded building materials he  was  carrying on  his  vehicle and  put them in the  premises of a neighbour.

4. The   complainant  stated  in   his   evidence  that  he   knew    the appellant to see and  that he had  known him  for three months before. The appellant, he said,  was carrying a metal club  and when  they got to the  bar,  the appellant requested the  complainant to  buy  him  a drink. The latter obliged.  The duo  stayed in the  bar  for 45 minutes during which  period  the   appellant  had   a  cup   of  senator  keg   while  the complainant who  paid  the bill  took  two  of the  same  drink.  The bill  was paid  by the  appellant.  The duo  left the  club  at about 10. 00 p.m.  They talked as they walked.  It was  the  testimony of the  complainant that the  appellant enquired where the  complainant worked because he had seen him  carrying building materials.

5. Immediately   after   passing  Miangeni  Secondary  School, the appellant attacked the  complainant and  using violence robbed him  of his identity card,  Shs.600/= and  a Nokia  mobile phone  No.1208, a belt and letters relating to his business. It was the  complainant’s evidence that the  appellant suddenly grabbed him by the shoulders and  ordered him  to remove everything from his  pockets lest he  killed him. The appellant strangled him  and  bit his  right ring  finger when  he  tried to shake   him   off.   It was  the   complainant’s further  evidence that  the appellant beat and  injured him  with the  metal rod  he was carrying and threw him   to  the   ground.    Defeated, the   complainant  surrendered. After robbing and  injuring the  complainant, the  appellant left him  for dead.

6. The complainant’s home  was not far from the  scene  of the  crime and  when  he  managed, two  hours  later, to  pick  himself up,  he  made his way  home  where he found only  his children as his wife  was away  in Nairobi at the  time.  In  the  morning, he  reported the  incident to the area   Assistant  Chief, Robert  Sito Ndumi,  who   testified as  PW4  and confirmed that the  complainant had  made  the  report to  him. In  the report, the  complainant told  the  area  Assistant Chief  that he knew  his assailant  was  called Mulili  Mutunga  and  that he  was  working for one Wilson.   Pw4  was  to later discover that the  appellant had  a different name.

7. PW4, the  area  Assistant Chief  of Miangeni sub-location, confirmed in   his   testimony  that  he   was   on   duty  on   12. 10. 2010  when   the complainant’s father, Mutula Kianga, in company of Mulwa  Mumo,  the village elder, reported to him  that the  former’s son  (the  complainant) had  been  injured and  wanted a letter to seek  medical assistance.  The identity of the  assailant was given as the  person who was drinking with the  complainant on  11. 10. 2010 and  who  was  working at the  home  of one  Muthusi.   The Assistant Chief  and  his two  guests visited the  scene of the  crime and  observed shoe  prints that led  to the  home  of Muthusi where they found the  appellant.  Apart from bhang, shoes,  guitar and a metal rod,  nothing else  was  found.   They  arrested him.     It was  not clarified whether Wilson  and  Muthusi  was  one  and  the  same  person. But nothing would turn on this  as the  appellant testified that he knew the  appellant and  whether he  worked for Muthusi or  Wilson   did  not bear  on the  evidence of recognition.

8. As is apparent from the  evidence, the  prosecution’s case  against the  appellant turned on the  evidence of the  single identifying witness, namely Felix Kinae Mutula, the  complainant.

9. The appellant was aggrieved by the  decision of the  trial court and consequently, filed in the  High Court at Machakos an appeal against his conviction and sentence in which he challenged the  evidence of identification by the  single identifying witness and  also contended that while the  weapon used  to  injure the  complainant was  not found in his possession, the  defence he adduced in the  trial court was rejected “for no good reason.”    The High  Court did not find merit in his appeal.  The High Court observed in its judgment thus  -

“...wedo   not  think  that  evidence  of  identification  of  the appellant  can   be   faulted.   The   complainant  had   known the appellant  long before the incident as  he  used to work for a neighbor as a herdsman.  On the material day, the complainant met with the appellant at a bus  stage.  Together they went to a club  and  the complainant bought him  a drink.  There was  light in  the club.  After having a  drink for about 45  minutes, they left together. It was  while on the way home that the appellant turned on  complainant and   robbed him.   In  the cause of the robbery  the  appellant  who    was    armed  with  a   metal  rod repeatedly struck the complainant leaving him  for death as  he took  off  with  the  complainant’s items  listed  in   the  charge sheet.  In  our view, the appellant had  been in  the company of the complainant for a  long time, they were in  close  proximity also  for a long time, and  being a person the complainant knew, he    could  not   have   mistaken   the   appellant   for   another person....”

“...itis also  instructive that he  mentioned the appellant as the person who  perpetrated the attack on  him  to the first person he  came in  contact with, his  father and  thereafter to the local administration.   Armed with the information, members of the public proceeded to the house of the appellant whom they and upon searching (sic) the house, they came across a metal rod, same as  that used during the robbery.  This  cannot merely be coincidence.”

10. The  High  Court  also  faulted the  trial Court,  correctly in  our view, for failing to warn  itself of the  danger of relying on evidence of a single identifying witness but it also  observed, correctly in  our  view, that the  circumstances under which the  complainant identified the appellant left  no   doubt  that  the   appellant  could   not  but  be   the assailant who  robbed the  complainant.  The High  Court observed in its judgment:

“...As already stated, the complainant knew the appellantverywell,  they  moved from  thebus   stage  to  the  club   as   they talked, there was  light in  the club, they stayed in  the club  for over 45  minutes as  they partook alcohol.   This  being the circumstances, can  it really be  said  that the complainant could not have identified the appellant?  We  do not think so...”

11. When  the  appeal came  up  for hearing before us  on  17th  July 2014, the  learned counsel Mr.  Ibrahim  Onyataappeared for the appellant while Mr. Kivihya, the  learned Assistant Director of Public Prosecutions  appeared for  the   State.    Mr.  Onyata  collapsed  the   8 grounds of appeal into   three and  argued  grounds 1  &  2  as  the  1 st ground and grounds 3 & 4 as the  2nd   ground and grounds 5, 6, 7 & 8 as the  third ground.

12. On  the  first ground, the  learned counsel submitted that  the evidence of  identification  by  the   complainant  lacked  corroboration. The learned counsel did  not furnish authority for that proposition even at the  behest of the  Court.   He was  however not wrong in  expressing the  need  for great circumspection by  the  Court  before relying on  the evidence of a single identifying witness.   In counsel’s view, the complainant had  had  alcohol which could  have  impaired his  ability to identify  the   assailant. He   pointed  out  the   contradictions  in   the prosecution evidence with regard to the  place  where the  weapon used in  the  robbery was  found and  contended that while  the  village elder (PW2) alleged that it was found at the  scene  of the  crime, the  Assistant Chief  (PW4) stated that it was found in the  house  of Muthusi where the appellant was  found.   He  urged us  to  consider why   the   witnesses followed footprints to the  house  where the  appellant was  found and contended that it would have  been  superfluous if  the  identity of the appellant had  been  known.  But this  does  not take  away  from the  fact that  the   complainant,  regardless  of  the   footprints  which  he   was ostensibly unaware of, had  described the  assailant  as  the  person he had  been  with at the  said  club  and  whom he knew. The footprints led the  trio to the  house  where the  appellant worked.  He was found there. The arrest of the  appellant was  not merely because the  foot-prints led to where he was found.  He had  been  described by the  complainant as aforestated.

13. The  learned counsel also  challenged the  decision of the  High Court on the  ground that the  High  Court did  not properly evaluate the evidence and  consequently came  to the  wrong conclusion.   That  too was   a  point  of  law.  Counsel   wondered  why   the   Court   did not interrogate the  question as regards the  name  of the  assailant the complainant  had  in  mind.   While   the   charge against  the   appellant referred  to  Mungani  Mungaathi  as   the   suspect,  the   complainant testified that the  person in his company at the  club  who  subsequently robbed him  was  called Mulili  Mutunga.  So what is the  appellant doing here  in court, asked  counsel, and yet  he is not Mulili  Mutunga.

14. First, the  evidence shows  that the  complainant stated that the suspect called himself Mulili  Mutunga.   He himself did not know  the assailant’s name  but he  had  known him  to  see  for about 3  months. That evidence is at variance with the  statement made  by counsel.  The record does not show  that the  complainant knew  the  suspect by name. He knew  him  to see and could  recognize him,  which he did.

15. On the  third ground, the  learned Counsel  contended that the High  Court  never evaluated the  evidence and  did  not ask  itself what the  direction of the  complainant’s  home  vis-à-vis the  scene  of crime was nor did it appear alive  to the  fact that it may  well  be that when  the complainant and  the  person he  was  with left the  bar,  they went to different   directions  and   that  the    complainant  might  have    been attacked  by   somebody  else   on  his   way   home.    These   arguments proceed from surmises, suppositions and speculation and are not borne out by  evidence.  The  evidence adduced in  the  trial court shows  that the  duo walked together and talked as they did so before the  appellant attacked the  complainant.

16. As   this   is   a   second    appeal,  we   are   constrained  by   the provisions of Section 361  of the  Criminal Procedure  Code,  Chapter 75 of the  Laws  of Kenya  to entertain only  issues  of law.    In  successive decisions   of   this    Court,    this    statutory   requirement   has    been emphasized again  and  again  and  in the  case  of Njoroge v.Republic[1982] KLR 388 this  Court emphasized that

“ona  second appeal,  the  Court of Appeal is  only   concerned with points of law.  On such  an  appeal, the Court was  bound by the  concurrent findings of  fact  made  by   the  lower Courts, unless  those   findings   were   shown  not   to   be    based   on evidence.”

17. In  this  appeal, the  evidence of identification  of the  appellant was  by  one  witness, namely the  complainant, PWI, who  testified that the  appellant was  not a  stranger to  him.    He  had  known him  for 3 months.  On the  day  the  crime was committed, the  complainant spent time with the  appellant as they walked together to the  bar  where they sat for 45  minutes during which the  complainant had  two  beers  and the  appellant one.   They  then  walked together out of the  bar  and  were on their way  home  when  the  appellant turned on the  complainant.  The trial Court watched the  demeanour of the  complainant and  that of the other prosecution witnesses as  well  as  that of the  appellant as  they testified.  It believed the  evidence of the  complainant and  rejected the denial by the  appellant that he committed the  offence.  The High  Court re-evaluated the evidence in its judgment.  Both Courts  arrived at concurrent findings which were  based  on the  evidence adduced at the trial.  We are  statutorily enjoined to accept these  concurrent findings. They  are  not plucked out of thin  air.  They  have  their foundation in the evidence.  If the  findings were  not supported by the  evidence adduced at the   trial, we  would be  justified in  rejecting them for the   simple reason that it would be an error of law  for a Court to make  a finding of fact that has no evidential support.  As the  second  appellate Court, we are justified in interrogating the  matter with a view  to find out whether the  findings of fact made  by  the  lower courts are  backed by evidence. Where   they do  not, that constitutes an  error of law  on  the  basis  of which  we   would  be  entitled  to   interfere.    An  appellant  would  be perfectly entitled to  address  this   Court  on  a  second   appeal on  the question whether the  concurrent findings were  based  on  evidence or not  because that  is  a  question of law.     But  unless   the   concurrent findings were  not based  on  the  evidence on  record, they are  binding and  will  be had  regard to in determining the  merits or otherwise of the appeal.

18. In  the  instant appeal, there is  ample evidence that  the  trial and  the  first appellate Courts  after evaluating the  evidence found that the   person  who   attacked  and   robbed  the   complainant  was   the appellant who  had  spent time in the  company of the  complainant and who  the  latter  knew.   There  is  no  basis  on  which those   concurrent findings  can   be   interfered  with.     The   period  during  which  the complainant and the  appellant spent together, the  conditions of light in the  bar,  and  the  fact that the  complainant already knew  the  appellant put the  evidence of recognition of the  appellant by  the  complainant beyond any doubt.

19. Learned counsel for the  appellant, Mr. Ibrahim Onyata tried to poke  holes  in the  findings by posing conjectures about the  directions of the  homes of the  complainant and the  appellant and the  surprising fact that the  complainant could  be robbed so near  his home  and  then  take such  a long  time to get  home  after the  ordeal.  The conjectures by the learned counsel did  not displace the  concurrent findings which had evidential backing.

20. The  first appellate Court  was  enjoined to  carefully undertake an inquiry to test the  evidence of the  complainant who  was  the  single identifying witness. Failure  to do so would have  constituted an error of law.   In the  case of MAITANYI V. REPUBLIC[1986] KLR 198  this  Court held:

1.  Although it is  trite law   that a  fact may be  proved by  the testimony  of a  single witness,  this  does   not  lessen the  need for testing with the greatest care the evidence of a  single witness respecting identification, especially when it is  known that the conditions favouring a correct identification were difficult.

2. When testing  the  evidence of a  single  witness  a  careful inquiry ought to be  made into the nature of the light available conditions  and    whether  the  witness  was    able  to  make  a   true impression and  description.

3.  The  court must warn itself of the danger of relying on  the evidence of a  single identifying witness.  It is  not enough for the court to warn itself after making the decision, it must do  so  when the evidence is being considered and  before the decision is made.

4.  Failure to undertake an  inquiry of careful testing is an  error of law  and  such  evidence cannot safely support a conviction.

21. In a recent decision of this  Court in Michael Kimani Kungu v. Republic(Criminal Appeal  No.686 of 2010  (R))  relating to  an  appeal for robbery with violence this  Court stated:

“This  court has  time and  again  pointed out that evidence of a single identifying witness needs  to be tested with the greatest care  before a conviction is based  on it so as to eliminate the possibility of an error or mistake (see ABDALLA  BIN  WENDO & ANOTHER versus REGINAM (1953) 20  E.A.C.A.155. It is accepted that even  the most honest of witnesses   can   be   mistaken  when   it  comes   to  identification  (see KAMAU versus  REPUBLIC(1975) EA 139).  In the light of this, conviction should only  ensue  when  it is beyond per  adventure that a suspect  was  properly identified.   In  the case  of CLEOPHAS OTIENOWAMUNGA  VERSUS REPUBLIC (1989) KLR 424this court correctly stated in this regard:-

“Evidence of visual identificationin  criminal  cases can  bring about miscarriage of justice and  it is  of vital importance that such  evidence is  examined carefully tominimize this danger. Whenever the case  against a defendant depends wholly or  to a great extent on the correctness of one  or more  identification of the accused which he  alleges to be  mistaken, the court must warn   itself of the special need  for caution before convicting the defendant in reliance on the  correctness   of  the  identification.  The   way to  approach the evidence  of  visual  identification   was    succinctly   stated  by Widgery, C.J. in the well-known case  ofR. VS. TURNBULL (1976) 3

ALL ER 549  at page 552 where he  said:-

“Recognition  maybe   more  reliable  than identification of a  stranger; but even when the witness is  purporting to recognize someone whom he    knows,  the   jury   should  be    reminded   that mistakes  in    recognition   of  close    relatives  and friends are sometimes made.””

“Althougha  fact may be  proved by  the testimony of a  single witness, “this does   not lessen the need for testing with the greatest  care the evidence of such  single witness respecting identification.”  This  is particularly so where the conditions are not conducive to proper identification  or where conditions favouring a correct identification are difficult.”

22. In  this   appeal,  the   evidence  shows   quite  clearly  that  the appellant was known to the  complainant and  that the  complainant and the  appellant spent time together in a bar  which had  electric light. The conditions  were   conducive  to  positive recognition.   Thereafter they walked away  together.  The complainant described the  attacker as the person he  was  drinking with.  He stated immediately he  was  able  to talk  that the  appellant who  was  drinking with him  and  whom he knew was the  assailant.

23. At no  time did  the  two  part company after leaving the  Bar before  the   complainant  was   attacked.    The   weapon  used   by   the assailant was similar to the  one found in the  house  where the  appellant was  found.   But even  if the  weapon and  other items stolen from the complainant  were   not  found  in   possession  of  the   appellant,  the evidence of recognition was  so  cogent that it left no  room  for doubt that the  appellant was the  robber.

24. The evidence shows  that the  appellant was armed with a metal rod and that he unleashed violence on the  appellant and robbed him  of the   items  stated  in  the   charge  in  respect  of  which  evidence  was adduced.  The  evidence of the  complainant as  the  single identifying witness has been  carefully tested.  It leaves  no doubt whatsoever that the  appellant committed the  offence with which he was  charged, tried and convicted.  We find no merit in the  appeal.

25. For the  foregoing reasons, we dismiss the  appeal.

Datedand  delivered at Nairobi this10thday  ofOctober 2014.

J. W.MWERA

............................

JUDGE OF APPEAL

G.B. M. KARIUKI

............................

JUDGE OF APPEAL

P. O.KIAGE

............................

JUDGE OF APPEAL

I certify that this is a true copy of the original.

DEPUTY REGISTRAR