Appeal Court, 23rd Nov., 1939.
.
Criminal Law and
Procedure-Witnesses on
depositions-Should
be called by prosecution for
crosss-examination-Evidence of
accomplice-Corroboration
of
Held: 1. Witnesses who have
given evidence at the
preliminary investigation must
be called at the trial for
cross-examination by the
defence: it is import's merely
to offer them as witnesses for
the defence.
[Rex versus Chipi Chigeri
3 W.A.C.A. 201 followed).
2. Where the trial Judge
expressed the view that a Crown
witness is an accomplice and
requires corroboration, a
conviction cannot be sustained
on the
evidence of that witness if in
fact it was uncorroborated.
There is no need to set out the
facts.
E. S. Beoku-Betts
for Crown.
R. B. Morke
(with him C.
E. Wright)
for Appellants. The following
joint judgment was delivered :-
KINGDON, c.J., NIGERIA, PETRIDES,
C.J.. GOLD COAST AND GRAHAM
PAUL, J.
In this case the five Appellants
were convicted by Lane Ag.
C.J. sitting with Assessors in
the Circuit Court of the
Protectorate of Sierra Leone of
the murder of an unknown man
near Giehun on the 11 th April,
1938.
Shortly the facts alleged by the
Prosecution are as follows :-
A stranger whose identity has
not been discovered came to a
place called Lalehun. He passed
through Lalehun and the same
evening he was murdered at or
near the farm hut of one Damanya
near Giehun. The murder, it is
alleged, was committed' at
twilight and the fact of the
murder was reported to the
Paramount Chief of the District,
Jo Kwi, at Lalehun the same
night. The suggestion of the
prosecution is that the murder
was organised by that Chief
himself. Chief Jo Kwi however
was not charged with any
complicity in the murder and was
a witness for the Crown at the
preliminary investigation.
After the report had been made
to the Chief the Crown Case is
that the Chief ordered that the
body be buried and the day after
the murder was committed a party
went to the spot and buried the
body in a place where (according
to the Assessors who sat on the
case in the Court below) it was
not ;n accordance with native
law and custom to bury the body
of an unknown stranger.
The motive suggested for the
murder was that it was a
cannibalistic ritual murder and
that mutilation was done on that
account.
The case for the defence was
that the evidence of the
witnesses for the prosecution
was a tissue of lies concocted
for the purpose of getting the
Paramount Chief and his
subordinate into trouble. The
first and second accused are
Sub-Chiefs under the Paramount
Chief Jo Kwi. The third accused
is a messenger of the Paramount
Chief. The fifth accused is a
servant of the Paramount Chief.
The fourth accused is a farmer
and trader living at Panguma,
the headquarters of the
Paramount Chief
All five accused have appealed
to this Court against their
convictions on grounds both of
fact and law. There are only two
grounds of appeal with which it
is necessary to deal.
One is that added as No.5 by
leave of the Court at the
hearing of the appeal namely :~
" That the learned Trial Judge
acted wrongly and improperly in
allowing the Prosecution not to
call and give evidence for the
prosecution three of the
witnesses for the prosecution
who had given evidence in the
preliminary Investigation" .
The incident referred to is
recorded thus:-
" Bodley-Not calling Aruna
Mendia, Algina, Jo Kwi; Offered
to defence to call as witnesses
not for cross-examination.
Marke objects and says the
witnesses should be produced for
examination.
Bodley-This is the right
procedure followed here.
Prosecution witnesses should be
offered to defence-not for
cross-examination" .
.• I do this now. Eg.
R. v. Vandi Gbou
&-
Ors.
my witnesses are here.
Arch. p.
505-R. v. Woodhead, R. v.
Cassidy.
Order-I hold that the witnesses
need not be offered for cross
examination but merely produced
to be called by defence if
desired ".
The question of the proper
procedure to be followed when
the Prosecution does not
consider it necessary or
desirable to call one or more of
the witnesse3 on the depositions
\vas considered by the West
African Court of Appeal in the
case of Rex v. Chipi Ckigeri
(3 W.A.C.A. 201). '[ he
condu~ion arrived at was that
the usual and proper practice
was that set out at 9 Halsbury
(2nd Edn.) p 232 as follows :-
.• All the witnesses whose names
are on the back of the
indictment should be called by
the prosecution. Even if it is
!lot proposed to cal! a witness
whose name is at the back of the
indictment, counsel for the
prosecution should, unless there
are reasons to the contrary,
place him in the witness-box so
that the defendant may have an
opportunity of cross· examining
him".
We now endorse the opinion then
expressed and state that it is
intended as a guide to all
Courts to which an appeal lies
to this Court in order to
resolve a doubt which is
apparent on the face of the
English decisions and text
books. For instance in 1847 in
the case of the Queen v.
Barley (2 Cox Cr. Cas. 191)
Chief Baron Pollock, after
consulting Coleridge J. decided
in favour of the view taken in
the above quotation from
Halsbury. On the other hand in a
number of other cases a contrary
decision was given. The last of
them which we have been
able to find reported is Reg.
v. Thompson in 1876 (13 Cox
Cr. Cas. 181).
We opine that the reason there
are no recent decisions on the
point is that for many years now
the practice as laid down in
Halsbury has been followed in
England, and we think it should
be generally followed in British
\Vest Africa, subject to
possible legislation to the
contrary.
Unfortunately, owing to delays
in printing, the Nigerian case
of Rex v. Chipi Chigeri
(supra.) was not available
in a convenient form as a guide
to the Court below and counsel
at the trial of this case, and
was overlooked.
Consequently, although Counsel
for the Defence claimed that the
practice which that case
declared to be usual and proper
should be followed, he did so
unsuccessfully and his
contention was over-ruled.
The result i~ that this Court
has found itself in ~n
exceedingly difficult position
upon the hearing of this appeal
After careful consideration,
however, we decided to put the
appellants as nearly as possible
in the same position as if the
proper practice had been
followed, by acceding to the
appellants' application to call
Jo Kwi in this Court for
cross-examination by Appellants'
counsel. His evidence was to the
ellect that he did not sleep at
Lalehun on the night of the
alleged murder nor was he there
the evening before. The Crown
did not attempt to show that he
had ever said anything different
from this. We then had to
consider what might have been
the effect on the Trial Judge
and Assessors if this evidence
had been given before them.
The evidence, if true, tends to
discredit the case for the
prosecution. We don't pretend to
form an opinion whether It is
true or not, and we find it
impossible to say what effect it
might have had upon the minds of
the Judge and Assessors if it
had been before them. It may be
that it would have made no
difference at all, on the other
hand it is possible that· it
would just have turned the scale
against the convictions of the
appellants. For this reason we
feel compelled to quash the
convictions.
The other ground of appeal of
importance is numbered I and is
that the verdict was against the
weight of evidence. under this
heading Counsel for the
appellants argued that the
evidence against the appellants
was that of accomplices only and
since there was no
corroboration, it would be
unsafe to allow the convictions
to stand. This submission could
not be seriously supported in
the case of the second appellant
against whom the evidence, apart
from that of accomplices, was
abundant. But it needed careful
consideration in the cases of
the first, third, fourth and
fifth appellants. In regard to
the first, third and four
appellants it is sufficient to
say that we are satisfied that
there was sufficient
corroboration to make it
unnecessary for the convictions
to be
quashed on this ground. But the
case of the fifth appellant was
different. The evidence against
him was that of Siaffa. Mada,
and it very definitely
implicated him in the murder. In
regard to this witness the
learned Trial Judge recorded the
following note of his summing up
: ---
" Siaffa. Mada
?-Accomplice-needs corroboration
".
I t is an open question whether
Siaffa Mada was or was not an
accomplice and the Judge
evidently thought it a proper
precaution, upon the principle
of giving an accused per!>on the
benefit of the doubt, to treat
Siaffa Mada as an accomplice
upon whose evidence it would be
unsafe to convict unless it were
corroborated. We think that the
precaution was a wise and proper
one. But in regard to the fifth
appellant we can find no
corroboration and Counsel for
the Crown was unable to suggest
any, indeed the only answer he
made to this ground of appeal of
the fifth appellant was to
contend that Siaffa Mada was not
an accomplice.
In the case of the fifth
appellant there is therefore
this further ground upon which
we find it necessary to quash
the conviction.
For the reasons given the
appeals of all the appellants
are allowed, the convictions and
sentences are quashed and it is
ordered that in each case a
judgment and verdict of
acquittal be entered
The appellants are discharged.