Peter Kamau Njoroge v Republic [2014] KECA 324 (KLR) | Defilement | Esheria

Peter Kamau Njoroge v Republic [2014] KECA 324 (KLR)

Full Case Text

INTHE COURT  OF APPEAL

AT NAIROBI

(CORAM: NAMBUYE, KIAGE & GATEMBU, JJ.A)

CRIMINAL APPEAL NO. 95 OF 2013

BETWEEN

PETER KAMAU NJOROGE........................................APPELLANT

AND

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

(Appeal from a ruling  of the High Court of Kenya at Nairobi  by

(Justice L. A. Achode) dated  20th December, 2012

in

HC. CR. A. 447 OF 2010

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JUDGMENT OF THE COURT

The  appellant PETER  KARANJA  NJOROGEwas  charged, tried and  convicted before the  Chief  Magistrate’s Court  at Kibera on a charge of defilement contrary to Section 8(1)as read  with Subsection (4)of the  Sexual Offences Act, No. 3  of 2006. The  particulars of the  charge were  that on  the  12th  day  of April 2008 at Dagoretti Market within  Nairobi Area  Province,  he  had carnal knowledge of JWK a girl  of seventeen years.  After hearing the  appellant’s mitigation and  the  prosecution’s brief address, the learned trial Magistrate sentenced the  appellant to 23  years imprisonment.

Disgruntled by  that conviction and  sentence, the  appellant preferred  a  first  appeal against both   to the   High   Court. That appeal was heard by L. A. Achode  J  who,  by a judgment delivered on   21st   December 2012, found it  to  be   devoid  of  merit  and dismissed it.   That  provoked  the   present  appeal in  which  the appellant by    a Memorandum of Appeal filed on  14th  May  2013 complains that the  learned Judge erred by;  failing to consider that Section 214of the  Criminal Procedure Codewas contravened rendering the  charge fatally defective and the  trial a nullity; failing to  find the  prosecution evidence to be highly incompetent and contradictory thus  unsafe to found a conviction as the  case  was not proved beyond reasonable doubt and finally that Section169 (1)of the  Criminal Procedure Codewas not complied with.

At the  hearing of the  appeal the  appellant tendered some written submissions. The first thrust of the  submissions was  that the  term of 23  years  imprisonment  imposed on  him  by  the  trial court and  upheld by  the  High  Court  was  not only  excessive but unlawful.   He  cited Section8  (4)of the  Sexual Offences Actwhich lays  a minimum sentence of fifteen years  for the  defilement of a child  between the  ages  of 16  and  18  years  in support of his contention.

Next  the   appellant  stated  that  there  was   a   variance between the  evidence of the  complainant and  the  charge in  that whereas the  charge sheet  stated the  offence of defilement only, the  complainant’s evidence was that she was both  defiled and sodomized.   This,  in  the  appellant’s contention, made  it difficult for him  to know  exactly what charge he was  facing and  he faults the  courts below  for not seeing the  necessity for the  charge sheet to have  been  amended pursuant to Section 214of the  Criminal Procedure Code.

The appellant  finally   submitted   that   the    offence   of defilement was not proved as the  prosecution did not prove penetration,   which  is   an   integral  part  of  the   offence.     He contended that in so far as the  medical evidence tendered by way of  the   P3  Form   indicated  that  the   complainant’s  “externalgenitalia were normal, the vulvaand  the vagina were normal”, then   penetration was  not  proved beyond reasonable doubt.   The  appellant therefore besought us  to  accord him  the benefit of doubt and set him  at liberty.

Before  us the  appellant adopted those  written submissions and  added only  that the  charge of defilement could not possibly lie in the  circumstances of the  case as the  victim was a full grown woman who  was  five months pregnant.  On that score  he faulted his conviction on a point of law.

Opposing this  appeal, Mr. C. O. Orinda the  learned Assistant Director of Public  Prosecutions first reminded us that this  being a second  appeal, we are jurisdictionally constrained and limited to a consideration of matters of law  only. In  this  he  is  right as  this Court  has  stated in  numerous cases  including NJOROGE VS R [1982]KLR   388,  that  second   appeals  must  be   confined  to matters of law.   The Court is bound by  concurrent findings of fact by the  courts below  unless  shown  to be based  on no evidence.

By  dint of Section 361(1)of the   Criminal  Procedure Codeon   a   second    appeal  this   Court   “shall  not  hearanappeal…

(a)  On  a  matter of  fact   and  severity of  sentence is  a matter of fact.”

It follows that the  appellant’s complaint about the  sentence being excessive is not open to our consideration.      See JOSEPH KIPLIMO–VS- R[2011] eKLR  (Criminal Appeal No. 416 of 2010.  Since the  statute terms severity of sentence a question of fact, we  find no  substance in  the  appellant’s challenge to  the sentence on the  basis  that it is unlawful in light of Section8(4)of the  Sexual Offence Act.   That provision sets the  minimum sentence for the  defilement of a child  in  the  age  bracket where the  complainant fell as 15 years. The sentence of 23 years imprisonment meted on the  appellant is compliant with that provision and  the  challenge on  the  learned Judge’s  decision on that score  fails.

On the  question of identification, Mr. Orinda submitted that the  appellant was  a close  neighbor with whom the  complainant was well  acquainted, so that there was no possibility of mistaken identity.   Upon  our  own  consideration of the  record, we  cannot but  agree    with  this   submission. The   evidence  led   by   the prosecution and  accepted by both  the  trial court and  the  learned Judge was  that the  complainant was  home  alone  on the  night of 12th   April   2008, her  cousin   and  roommate not having arrived. Some  time past 9. 00pm some  young man  named Njoroge forced himself into   the  complainant’s house  intent on  having his  way with her.    Although she  was  four months pregnant at the  time, PW1 fought Njoroge off and  screamed.  In answer to her  cry  for help,  her  next door  neighbour, whom she  referred to  as “Mzee”, arrived and the  intruding Njoroge ran off.

The neighbour, who  at first appeared to be PW1’s knight in shining armour and  rescuer turned out to  be  anything but noble or altruistic for he now  demanded that PW1 go into  his house  to avoid  the  risk  of the  intruder’s return.   When  PW1 declined the offer, the   neighbour  pulled  her  into   his  house   and  locked  the door.  He unleashed a whip  and  beat PW1 with it in forcing her  to undress before raping her  at length.  He was  unmoved by  PW1’s pleas  to  be  spared as  she  was  with child.   He  was  undeterred even  by the  arrival at 9. 30p.m of PW1’s cousin  who  called to him to  enquire if he had  seen  her.   He replied in the  negative, hardly pausing in his rapacious undertaking.  After nearly two  hours  PW1 convinced the  neighbour–rapist that she needed to go out of the house  for a call of nature and when  he allowed her to get  out, she locked  his   house   from  the   outside  and   ran.     She  eventually reached  the   Dagoretti  Police   Station,  clad   in  a  tee-shirt  only, where she reported her ordeal.

The neighbour she referred to  as ‘Mzee’ she was  emphatic in  her  statement to the  police and  in  her  examination in  chief, was the  appellant.  His cross-examination of her  clearly betrayed the  close knowledge and association of the  duo that dispelled any notion that there was  any  mistake as to identity.  He asked  her about other neighbours by  name.   And  she  repeatedly told  the trial court that the  appellant was her tormentor;

“Iknow  you and  you raped me …

Iam   not  lying,  you   raped  me   when I  was pregnant …  You  came   like   a  rescuer but  you pulled me  to your  house  raped and  sodomized me  and  also  told me  to put your  penis  in  your mouth”.

Even  though PW1 provided the  sole  identification evidence against the  appellant, it is clear  to us that both  courts below  did caution themselves on  the  need  to  test such  evidence with the greatest care  before basing a conviction on it. The circumstances surrounding   the    commission   of   the    offence   including   the proximity of the  appellant’s dwelling place  to PW1’s, the  fact that they saw  each  other on  an  almost daily   basis  while PW1  lived next door   and  the   fact that  there was  conversation  and  light during the  entire episode. We are on our part satisfied that there was  no  misdirection on  the  part of the  trial Court  or  the  High Court.    Their  concurrent findings of fact were  sound  and evidence–based.    The  learned  Judge  properly  appreciated  and applied the   decision of this   Court  in  OGETO –VS- REPUBLIC [2004]2KLR   14,in   striking  the   balance  between  the   trite principle that  a  fact  is  provable  by  the   evidence  of  a  single witness and  the  need  for circumspection when  dealing with identification. There  was no danger of mistake in the  instant case where the  evidence was  that of recognition which, as this  Court stated in  ANJONONI & OTHERS –VS- R  [1980] KLR  59; “is more  satisfactory, more  assuring and more  reliable than  the identification of a stranger because it depends upon  the  personal knowledge of the  assailant in some  form or other”.

The evidence against the  appellant was bolstered by corroboration, even  though by virtue of Section 124of the Evidence Actthe  trial court would have  been  entitled to convict him   absent  such   corroboration.  It  is  in  fact  provided by  the medical evidence tendered by  DR  KAMAU (PW3)who  testified that  PW1  had   bruises to  her   knees.  He  confirmed  she  was gestate.   A  rectal  exam on  her  revealed  tenderness.  We  are unable to accept the  appellant’s contention that the  absence of visible injuries in PW’s genitalia negatives forced or unlawful penetration.     Injury  is   not  an   ingredient  of  the   offence  of defilement.

There  was  ample evidence tendered that the  appellant did in fact defile and sodomize his hapless and helplessneighbour.  That  he  was  charged with defilement only  in  the main   charge without  the   additional  charge of sodomy did  not render the  charge defective and also occasioned the  appellant no prejudice.  If anything he suffered an advantage in not being charged with an additional offence that the  evidence showed he committed.

The  totality of our  consideration of this  appeal is that it is devoid of merit as conviction was proper and the  sentence lawful. We shall  disturb neither.

The appeal is accordingly dismissed.

Dated and delivered at Nairobi this  10th day of October 2014.

R. N.NAMBUYE

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JUDGE OF APPEAL

P. O.KIAGE

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JUDGE OF APPEAL

S. GATEMBUKAIRU

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JUDGE OF APPEAL

I certify that thisis a true copy  of the original

DEPUTY REGISTRAR