Republic v E N W [2019] KEHC 5286 (KLR)
Full Case Text
REPUBLIC OF KENYA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF KENYA
AT NAIROBI
CRIMINAL CASE NO 78 0F 2015
LESIIT, J
REPUBLIC.............................................................PROSECUTOR
VERSUS
ENW...............................................................................ACCUSED
RULING ON SENTENCE
1. The accused was arraigned before this court on the 11th August 2015 with one count of Murder contrary to section 203 as read with section 204 of the Penal Code. The plea was not taken until 29th November 2016. This is because the accused was admitted at Mathare Mental Hospital after this court’s order on 11th August,2015. He was discharged from Mathare Hospital and produced in court on 12th April 2016. Plea was then taken on 29th November 2016.
2. The sentence for the offence of murder is prescribed under Section 204 of the Penal Code which is a mandatory death sentence. However in this case, a special finding of “guilty but insane” was entered under section 166(1) of the Criminal Procedure Code. Under section 166(2) of the Criminal Procedure Code, the law provides:
(2)“when a special finding in so made, the court shall report the case for the order of the president and shall meanwhile order the accused to be kept in custody in such a place and in such manner as the court shall direct”
3. The prosecution through counsel Ms. Onunga has asked the court to treat the accused as a first offender.
4. Mr. Munene, counsel for the accused has asked the court to consider that the accused has been in custody since 1st August 2015 and had undergone treatment for psychosis and bipolar disorder and that the accused was 34 years old and was an economics graduate.
5. Mr. Munene urged that there were new developments in the area of cases similar to this one and relied on a persuasive case of Republic V SOM, Kisumu High Court Criminal Case No.6 of 2011. Counsel urged this court to be persuaded by the cited decision on the developments that declared parts of the provisions of section 166of theCriminal Procedure Code(herein after referred to as CPC) unconstitutional on the basis of finding the indeterminate sentence under section 166 of the CPC cruel and inhuman.
6. Counsel submitted that in light of the cited case of SOM supra, the court ought to consider a review upon sentencing, a function previously undertaken by the President, and make a decision based on whether the accused treatment has been successful and whether he was fit to be re-integrated back to the society.
7. Mr. Munene urged that the family of the accused was willing to foot the costs associated with treatment of the accused at a private facility.
8. I have taken into consideration all the relevant factors, the accused mitigation, the sentiments of the prosecution and the cited cases.
9. Mr. Munene made reference to the case of Republic vs. SOM. In that case, Majanja J., after making a special finding in the cited case under section 166 (1) of the Criminal Procedure Code observant that:
“However, this is not the end of the matter as I have doubt as to the constitutionality of these provisions particularly in light of the recent Supreme Court decision in Francis Karioko Muruatetu and Another v Republic,SCK Petition No. 15 and 16 of the 2015 (UR)where the court held that it is the judicial duty to impose a sentence that meets the facts and circumstances of the case. This suggests that a law that leaves the length of the sentence to another authority violates the fundamental rights and freedoms of the accused…
10. The learned judge proceeded to examine various decisions of judges touching on the same or similar issue. Some of the cases and his observations are as follows:
“Several cases have cast doubt on constitutional validity of provisions that impose an indeterminate sentence on an accused at the instance of an authority other than the courts. For example, inAOO and 6 Others v Attorney General and AnotherNRB Petition No. 570 of 2015 [2017]eKLR, Mativo J.,held that the provisions of the Penal Code where a child found guilty of murder is held at the pleasure of the President is unconstitutional as it violates the right to a fair trial under the Constitution.
Our courts have also been concerned about the treatment of persons with mental disability under the provisions of the CPC. InHussan Hussein Yusuf v RepublicMeru High Court Criminal Appeal No. 59 of 2014 [2016]eKLR, Kiarie J., held that section 167(1) of the CPC which directs that a person suffering from mental disability and is unable to understand the proceedings is to be detained at the pleasure of the President is unconstitutional as it violates Articles 25 and 29 of the Constitution that prohibit cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment. The learned judge reiterated this position inB K J v Republic,MERU HC Criminal Appeal No. 16 of 2015 [2016]eKLR. In Joseph Melikino Katuta v Republic, Voi HC Criminal Appeal No. 12 of 2016 [2016]eKLR, Kamau J., emphasized the point that keeping a mentally ill person in prison for an indeterminate period of time is cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment contrary to Articles 25 and 29 of the Constitution.
Turning back to the provisions of section 166 of the CPC, it is clear that the court’s duty comes to an end when it enters the special verdict against the accused and directs the accused’s detention pending the President’s decision. As Mativo J., noted inAOO and 6 Others v Attorney General(Supra),‘The constitution being the supreme law of the land separates the powers of the legislature, the executive and the Judiciary. Judicial power is reserved to the Judiciary. The imposition of a punishment in a criminal matter which includes the assessment of its severity is an integral part of the administration of justice and is therefore the exercise of judicial, not executive, power.’This holding is, in my view, consistent with what the Supreme Court held in the Muruatetu Case(Supra). The vesting of discretion on the President on how the accused is to be treated after conviction is inimical to the fundamental duty of the Judiciary to determine the guilt of the accused and determine the terms upon which he or she serves the sentence. The fact that the statute provides for a periodic review by the President upon advice of executive functionaries goes further to buttress this key point.
I therefore find and hold that the provisions of section 166of the CPC are unconstitutional to the extent that they take away the judicial function to determine the nature of the sentence or consequence of the special finding contrary to Article 160 of the Constitution by vesting the discretionary power in the executive. It also violates the right to a fair trial protected under Article 25of the Constitution.
11. Majanja J. proceeded to apply the provisions of section 7(1) of the Sixth Schedule to the Constitution, in order to align the provisions of section 166 of the CPC to the Constitution. The learned judge correctly observed that the Court is entitled to construe existing laws, such as the CPC as one of the ‘existing laws’ that continue to be in force, with such modifications, adaptations, qualifications and exceptions necessary to bring its provisions into conformity with the Constitution,as provided under section 7 of the Sixth Schedule of the Constitution.
12. Judge was of the view that section 166 of the CPC which provides for the review of a sentence of one found “guilty but insane” to be carried out by the President rather than the court, was what created a problem. He proceeded to align the section to the Constitution by holding that henceforth the reference to “President” shall be read to mean, “the Court”, finding that the effect of this was to ensure that the accused is brought before the court periodically so that the court may review the matter and if necessary call for and take necessary expert and other evidence before making an appropriate order within the framework of a definite period of detention imposed by the Court.
13. Section 166of theCPCis pegged to the power given to the President to exercise a Power of Mercy.Undersub-sections (2), (3), (5) and (6)the CPC provides thus:
‘(2) When a special finding is so made, the court shall report the case for the order of the President, and shall meanwhile order the accused to be kept in custody in such place and in such manner as the court shall direct.
(5) On consideration of the report, the President may order that the person so detained be discharged or otherwise dealt with, subject to such conditions as to his remaining under supervision in any place or by any person, and to such other conditions for ensuring the safety and welfare of the person in respect of whom the order is made and of the public, as the President thinks fit.’
14. It is clear under sub-section (5)that the President is empowered, not to pass a sentence over the person against whom the court has entered a special finding under sub-section (1),but a power of mercy. The former is a judicial function and the latter is an executive responsibility. We adopted that system from Britain and I believe many commonwealth countries adopted it too. As can be understood in the Privy Council decision in REYES Vs. R (BELIZE) (2002) UKC 11:
“…The board is mindful of the constitutional provisions governing the exercise of the Power of Mercy by the Governor-General. It is plain that the Advisory Council has a most important function to perform. But it is not a sentencing function. Both in language and literature mercy and justice are contrasted. The administration of justice involves the determination of what punishment a transgressor deserves, the fixing of the appropriate sentence for the crime. The grant of mercy involves the determination that a transgressor need not suffer the punishment he deserves, that the appropriate sentence may for some reason be remitted. The former is a judicial, the latter is an executive responsibility.”
15. The judicial function to pass sentence is reserved to the judicial process and cannot be taken away from it. However, the law gives the Executive a responsibility to make a determination whether a person need not suffer the punishment imposed against him by the court, and may remit such punishment for some reason, in certain cases. That executive power has constitutional underpinning under Article 133 of the Constitutionwhich stipulates thus:
“133(1) On the petition of any person, the President may exercise a power of mercy in accordance with the advice of the Advisory Committee established under clause (2), by-
(a) granting a free or conditional pardon to a person convicted of an offence;
(b) Postponing the carrying out of a punishment, either for a specified or indefinite period;
(c) Substituting a less severe form of punishment; or
(d) Remitting all or part of a punishment.”
16. The Advisory Committee is established under Article 133(2) of the Constitution and its membership includes the Attorney General as Chair and the Cabinet Secretary responsible for correctional purposes. Furthermore, Parliament was mandated to enact Legislation to provide for-
“(a)…
(b)…
(c) criteria that shall be applied by the Advisory Committee in formulating its advice.”
17. Parliament enacted the Power of Mercy Act No. 21 of 2011. The application of the Act is provided under section 3 as follows:
“The provisions of this Act shall govern all matters relating to a petition under the Constitution for the exercise of the power of mercy by the President pursuant to Article 133 of the Constitution.”
18. That committee is the one referred to under section 166(6) of the CPCwhich provides:
“(6) Notwithstanding the subsections (4) and (5), a person or persons thereunto empowered by the President may, at any time after a person has been detained by order of the President under subsection (3), make a special report to the Minister for transmission to the President, on the condition, history and circumstances of the person so detained, and the President, on consideration of the report, may order that the person be discharged or otherwise dealt with, subject to such conditions as to his remaining under supervision in any place or by any person, and to such other conditions for ensuring the safety and welfare of the person in respect of whom the order is made and of the public, as the President thinks fit.”
19. Under section 2 of that Act,the interpretation section,a picture is created of the kind of persons who may petition and therefore whose matters the committee may consider as:
“a convicted criminal prisoner” means any criminal prisoner under sentence of a court or a court martial, and includes a person detained in prison under sections 162 to 167 of the Criminal Procedure Code (Cap 75).”
20. It is clear that passing sentence is an integral part of the judicial function. Equally important is the exercise of power of mercy, a responsibility that has been donated under the Constitution (2010) to the President acting on recommendations by the Power of Mercy Committee. This is an important role which has both constitutional and statutory underpinning. It is for that reason that I would hesitate to take the route suggested by my learned brother in the SOM case, supra where he declared that the name of the President be replaced with that of the court in section 166 of the CPC untenable.
21. In addition, once a trial court passes sentence after conviction, it becomes functus officio, and can no longer handle the matter again. Unless of course for purposes of review where that is applicable. The case file will have come to an end and will be marked concluded. I would hesitate to keep the matter open for further periodic action after concluding it as, in my view, it would render the doctrine of functus officio nugatory.
22. I can understand the frustrations we face as a court when you find children you detained at the President’s pleasure still incarcerated several years later, and worse still without any word from the POMAC or Ministry concerned. That is a matter that the ministry concerned needs to look into to ensure that the cases of persons sentenced under section 166 of the CPC, or those of underage children are attended to as provided under section 25(2) and (3) of the Penal Code.The delay cannot be cured by having the matter mentioned in court.
23. In conclusion, I do find that it is expedient and judicious to give a determinant sentence in cases concluded under section 166(1)of theCPC. After so doing, the court becomes functus officio, and should let the Executive carry out its responsibility under section 166 (2)to(7) of the CPC.
24. I have considered the period the accused has been in custody during the pendency of this case, a period of four years. The doctors found that the accused was suffering from schizophrenia, which is a mental illness dependent on medication. The drug induced psychosis is directly caused by drug and substance abuse. For the former, the accused cannot be blamed. However, for the drug induced psychosis, it is the accused abuse of drugs which immensely contributed to it.
25. Having come to the conclusions I have, and having taken all the relevant factors pertaining to sentencing into consideration, I sentence the accused as follows:
a) Accused will serve 13 years imprisonment from date he was arraigned in court that is 11/8/2015.
b) The proceedings herein be typed and a certified copy of the record and the notes from this court be transmitted to the ministry concerned for consideration by the president.
c) Right of appeal explained to the accused.
DATED AT NAIROBI THIS 23rd DAY OF JULY, 2019.
LESIIT, J
JUDGE