Appeal Court. 26 Sept., 1936
Murder-Trial with
assessors-Assessors differ-Judge
convicts under
section
260
of Criminal Procedure
Code-Weight of evidence-Delay
of eye-witness in
reporting-Element of
doubt-Standard Supreme of
proof-Separate trials when
defences inimical.
Held: Appeal allowed. Conviction
quashed.
J. L. Minnow for
Appellant. T. A. Brown
for Crown.
The following joint judgment was
delivered:
PETRIDES, C.]., GOLD COAST,
YATES AND BARTON, J].
This is an appeal from a
conviction of murder in Ashanti.
The accused was tried together
with one Yaw Frimpong, who also
appealed, but owing to illness
was unable to attend and
instruct his Counsel, by
Strother-Stewart, J., sitting
with assessors in Kumasi on
August 12th, 1936, and
subsequent days. At the
conclusion of the case the
assessors gave their opinion as
follows: one expressed his view
that the prisoners were guilty,
one that the case was not
proved, and the third that they
were not guilty. The learned
Judge as he is entitled to do by
virtue of section 260 of the
Criminal Procedure Code gave his
decision that the prisoners were
guilty.
The accused appealed. For the
reasons given above the second
accused could not attend, and
this appeal only refers to the
first accused, and the principal
ground of appeal is that the
decision was contrary to the
weight of evidence.
By section 10 (1) of the West
African Court of Appeal
Ordinance, 1935, this Court
shall allow an appeal if in its
opinion the conviction cannot be
supported having regard to the
evidence. In view of the fact
that the alleged eye-witnesses
did not come forward until the
14th April, and the deceased was
killed on March 7th, although
they had every facility for so
doing, raises in the minds of
this Court a distinct element of
doubt such as was obviously in
the minds of two of the
assessors. In the case of
Knowles v. The King
(1930) A.C., p. 366, on page 372
Lord Dunedin says a Court of
Criminal Appeal is entitled to
consider what would have been
their own verdict. After fully
considering the evidence as a
whole we are of opinion the
evidence in this case has not
reached the standard of proof
necessary to involve a
conviction for murder vide
Knowles v. The King
quoted before on page 377 and
there is in our minds such a
doubt as would entitle the
prisoner to acquittal.