Nyamai Musyoka v Republic [2014] KECA 331 (KLR) | Defilement | Esheria

Nyamai Musyoka v Republic [2014] KECA 331 (KLR)

Full Case Text

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL AT NAIROBI

CORAM: GITHINJI, KARANJA & M’INOTI, JJ.A

CRIMINAL APPEAL NO. 155 OF 2013

BETWEEN

NYAMAI MUSYOKA.............................................APPELLANT

AND

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

(An Appeal  from a conviction  &  sentence  of the  High Court  of Kenya  at

Machakos (Ngugi, JJ.)dated 28thSeptember,2012

in

H.C.CR.A. NO. 213OF 2009)

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

JUDGMENT OF THE COURT

Nyamai Musyoka(appellant)was   charged   before the   Kitui   Principal Magistrate’s Court with the offence of defilement contrary to Section 8(1)(3)of the SexualOffences Act No. 3 of 2006with an alternative charge  of indecent act with a child contrary to Section 11(1)of the same Act.

He is said to have committed the said acts against a child (who we shall refer to as A.P.for purposes of protecting her identity pursuant to the Children’s Act), who was aged thirteen (13) years.  He denied both the main and the alternative charges. After a trial in which a total of five witnesses testified for the prosecution, with the appellant  tendering sworn evidence,  the appellant  was found guilty, convicted  and sentenced to serve a term of twenty (20) years imprisonment.

Apparently, although the learned magistrate convicted the appellant on both the main and the alternative charges, which in itself was erroneous, she pronounced  only one sentence. It is not clear whether  the same was on the main or on the alternative count. This error was nonetheless corrected on appeal before the High Court (Ngugi, J.)  and we shall not therefore dwell on it.

In his first appeal before the High Court, the appellant proffered seven grounds of appeal. He complained inter aliathat some crucial witnesses had not been called to testify; that Section 211of the Criminal Procedure Codehad not been complied with; identification was not foolproof and that the evidence  adduced fell short of proving the charges against him beyond reasonable doubt.

From the contents of the judgment rendered by the High Court, it is manifest that the  Judge  re-evaluated  and reconsidered  afresh  the entire evidence  presented before the trial court in great detail. He then considered individually each and every ground of appeal and the law in point and upheld the conviction and sentence on the main charge  of defilement.  As  stated  earlier  on, the  learned  Judge  set  aside  the conviction on the alternative count.

Still  dissatisfied  with the  conviction, the  appellant  moved to this  court on second appeal.  He has raised three main grounds of appeal through his memorandum of appeal filed on 3rd November 2012. In paraphrase, the grounds are that the learned Judge did not “adequately resolve” the question of the defects in the charge sheet; that there was paucity of evidence in that no DNA test was done on him to establish guilt;and that the defects in the charge sheet could not have been cured by invoking Section382of the Criminal Procedure Code (C.P.C).

At the hearing of the appeal, the appellant who appeared in person informed us that he was relying on the said grounds and the written submissions which he filed that morning - which basically only expounded on the said grounds.  He urged us to allow his appeal.

In opposing the appeal and supporting both the conviction and sentence Mr. Orinda, learned Assistant Deputy Prosecuting Counsel, submitted that the appellant was positively recognized by the complainant as the person who defiled her and that identification was  based on recognition  and  was  therefore  very reliable.  Learned counsel submitted that the appellant was a close neighbour who the complainant was used to seeing and thus she knew him well. Citing the evidence of the complainant’s mother (PW2), learned  counsel  went on to submit  that the act of penetration  was proved as evidenced by the fact that there was blood trickling down the complainant’s legs after the incident.  In response to the appellant’s contention that his defence had not been considered, learned counsel asserted that the defence was considered but was found insufficient to displace the prosecution evidence.

On the issue of the defective charge sheet, counsel was in concurrence with the learned  Judge that  the  defect was  curable  under Section  382 C.P.C.and that no prejudice had been visited on the appellant by the apparent defect. He urged us to dismiss  this  appeal.  This  being a  second  appeal,  only points  of law fall for our determination. It is trite however that conclusions drawn from the analysis of facts are indeed  points  of law.  It is therefore  necessary for us to briefly revisit  the facts  as presented before the trial court to enable us determine whether the two courts below arrived at the proper conclusions.

The brief circumstances of this case were that the thirteen (13) years old child was on her way to the river to fetch water on the material date and time. She met the appellant  who according  to her was a neighbor  who was very well known to her before this encounter. After exchanging greetings, the appellant gave her ksh100/=, got hold of her and defiled her. He is said to have warned her that he would kill her should  she  disclose  to anyone  what had befallen her. When she went  home,  her mother A(P.W.2)noticed that her clothes were torn and soiled. There was also some blood trickling down her legs. They reported the matter to the police station where they gave the name of the appellant. The child was taken to hospital where she was examined by the clinical officer Martin Njue (P.W. 5), who found her hymen broken with a perennial tear. His conclusion was that the child had been defiled. In his defence the appellant denied the offence and said that he had been framed up by the complainant’s father. As stated earlier, the learned magistrate after considering this evidence found the charge proved and convicted the appellant, a conviction that was upheld by the first appellate court following what we have found to have been an exemplary re-scrutiny of the evidence on record. We find no fault whatsoever with the concurrent findings of fact by the two courts below.

We now come to the other points of law which arise in this matter and which call for our determination. These are:

1)         Whether the identification of the appellantwaswatertight;

2)         Whether   the  appellant   was  prejudiced  by  theerrorsin the  charge sheet?

3)         Was the error merelya technicality and is it capable of being cured or did it occasion a miscarriage of Justice?

4)      Whether  the evidence adduced was sufficient to support the conviction.

Whether the identification of appellant was watertight;

This Court  has variously restated that it is possible for a witness to be honest but mistaken and for a number of witnesses to all be mistaken. The predecessor of this Court in Abdala Bin Wendo & Another. vs R. [1953] 20 EACA at P.168expressed itself as follows:

“Subject  to certain  well known  exceptions itis trite law thata fact may be proved by the testimony of a single witness but this rule  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.   In such circumstances  what is  needed  is  other evidence, whether it be circumstantial or direct, pointing to guilt from which a judge or jury can reasonably conclude that the evidence of identification,  although based on the testimony of a single witness can be accepted as free from the possibility of error.”

(See also Kiilu & Another V. Republic [2005] 1 KLR 174).

Evidence of a single identifying witness as is in this case, must be examined  with considerable circumspection to ensure that it cannot but be true before a conviction is founded on it.

The only evidence  implicating the appellant  was that of the complainant.   Was it water-tight and such as could not but be believed, or did it leave room for doubt?  We note that the offence herein was committed at around 11:00 am which was in broad daylight. The complainant testified that she knew  the appellant before the incident because he was  her  neighbour.  She had plenty of time to see  his  face  during her ordeal. The possibility of mistaken identity was as the learned Judge put it, ‘virtually nil’.

The learned judge also observed that  the appellant was  known to the complainant prior to the attack and that identification was by recognition as opposed to mere visual identification. As this Court pronounced itself in the often cited case of Anjononi & Others vs Republic, [1976-80] 1 KLR 1566at page 1568,

“…recognition of anassailant is moresatisfactory, moreassuring, andmore reliable than identification ofa stranger because it depends upon the personal knowledge of the assailant in some form or other.”

As to whether the uncorroborated evidence of the complainant on the identification of the  appellant  was  sufficient  to support  a conviction, we  reiterate  our findings  inMohamed v Republic [2006]2 KLR 138,where we stated:-

“Itis  now  settled that  the  Courts  shall  no longer  be hamstrung  by requirements of corroboration where the victim of a sexual offence is a child of tender years if it is satisfied that the child is truthful.”

In the present appeal, the trial magistrate conducted  a voire direexamination of

the complainant, and was satisfied that the child was a truthful witness. Similarly the first appellate court which re-evaluated  the evidence was satisfied as  to the truthfulness  of the complainant’s  testimony. We have no basis  for interfering with these concurrent findings of the two Courts below.

The  appellant’s  other contention  was  that  there was  no tangible  medical evidence adduced to link him with the complainant’s defilement since no DNA test was conducted on him and the complainant. This Court  has had occasion to address this issue on several occasions before. See for instance Aml v Republic [2012] eKLR (Mombasa), where we expressed the view that;

“The fact of rape or defilementisnot proved by way of a DNA test but by way of evidence.”

This holding was further affirmed in the case of Kassim Ali v Republic Cr. App. No.84 of 2005(Mombasa)where this Court stated:

“… [The]  absence of medical examination  to support the fact of rape is not decisive as the fact of rape can be proved by the oral evidence of a victim of rape or by circumstantial evidence.”

From the foregoing, our finding is that the appellant was properly identified as the complainant’s  defiler. We find the identification  watertight.  This  ground of appeal therefore fails.

Was the appellant prejudiced by the errors in the charge sheet?

The answer to the question as to whether the appellant was prejudiced by the error in the charge sheet as the learned Judge pointed out must begin with Section 382 of the CriminalProcedure Codeprovides that:-

“No finding,  sentence or order  passed bya court of competent jurisdiction shall be reversed or altered on appeal or revision on account of an error,  omission or irregularity in the complaint, summons, warrant, charge, proclamation, order, judgment or other proceedings  before  or  during   the  trial   or  in any inquiry  or  other proceedings under this code, unless the error,  omission or irregularity has occasioned a failure of justice.”

The test for whether  a charge sheet is fatally defective is a substantive one. So we must ask ourselves whether the accused was charged with an offence known to law. In this case as was  rightly pointed out by the learned Judge, the appellant was charged under  Section8 (1) (3)of the  Sexual  offencesAct. This was evidently a misdirection of the section creating the offence and it is apparent to us that the police intended to charge the appellant under section 8 (1)as read with section 8 (3)of the Sexual offences Act. The prevailing question however is whether this prejudiced him in any way. It is our finding that this was a minor technical defect and it is clear from the record that all other procedures were followed to the letter and the appellant was accorded  a fair hearing and he understood  the charge that was facing him. His full participation  in the trial process  vindicated  that position.  If  a  defective  charge  is followed  by a  series  of other procedural  or substantive  mistakes  and  which in particular affect the rights of the accused person, or the defect goes into the root of the charge distorting it in a way that the accused cannot understand the charge, then the Court ought to be reluctant to apply Section 382 C.P.C.to cure the defect. In this case, we agree with the learned Judge that the defect did not prejudice the appellant in any  manner and  the   invocation  of   Section    382  C.P.C.  was    proper  in   the circumstances.

In conclusion, we are satisfied that the appellant was properly convicted on the charge of defilement. His appeal before the High Court was properly dismissed, and the instant appeal is totally devoid of merit. We dismiss the same.

Dated and delivered at Nairobithis 10thday of October,2014.

E. M. GITHINJI

………………………….

JUDGE OF APPEAL

W. KARANJA

…………………………..

JUDGE OF APPEAL

K. M’INOTI

…………………………..

JUDGE OF APPEAL

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

DEPUTY REGISTRAR