Mudogo v Republic (Criminal Appeal 105 of 2017) [2023] KECA 1253 (KLR) (6 October 2023) (Judgment)
Neutral citation:
[2023] KECA 1253 (KLR)
Republic of Kenya
Criminal Appeal 105 of 2017
PO Kiage, F Tuiyott & WK Korir, JJA
October 6, 2023
Between
Boaz Saiya Mudogo
Appellant
and
Republic
Respondent
(Being an Appeal from a conviction and sentence from the judgment of the High Court of Kenya at Kakamega, (RN Sitati, J.) dated 28th March, 2017 in HCCRA No 136 of 2014)
Judgment
1.In this second appeal, Boaz Saiya Mudogo (the appellant) maintains that the injuries he caused to Aggrey Shimaka were in the course of him defending himself and that his conviction for the offence of attempted murder contrary to section 220 (a) of the Penal Code is without foundation.
2.In his submissions before us, the appellant also sets up a second argument. He asserts that the prosecution failed to carry out its own ‘ground evidence’ that the charges preferred against him were not justified since he was a victim of an attack and that the charges preferred should have been an assault resulting from a fight and not of attempted murder.
3.As this is a second appeal our remit is prescribed by the provisions of section 361 of the Criminal Procedure Code. Of this remit, this Court in Karani -vs- R [2010] 1 KLR 73 stated:
4.The prosecution case was that at about 7.30pm on January 10, 2014, Aggrey Shimaka (PW1), Patrick Sirikwa (PW4) and one Boniface Kulecho, rode on a motorbike with PW4 as the rider. As they approached Isikhu river, a man emerged from the side of the road. In reaction, PW1 brought the motorbike to a stop and put off the headlights. The man, recognized by PW1 and PW4 as the appellant, was armed with a panga. Suddenly, using the weapon, he cut Boniface. This was to be a fatal blow. He then turned to PW1 and also cut him on the left side of his rib cage. Although PW1 tried to defend himself, he suffered further injuries when he was cut on the left side of the chin and on the front side of the neck. To escape further harm, PW1 run away towards the gate of the home Robert Odinga Zaddock with the appellant in pursuit.
5.The version by the appellant was that on that night he set off to his home on foot and on approaching the gate of St. Anthony, a motorbike came from the opposite direction. The rider lit the headlights and, rather strangely, gestured how he could behead him. He walked on but on reaching a place called Nguvuli at the river bridge, he saw a motorbike with a rider and two pillion passengers. Headlights were lit blinding him. One of the three ordered him to remove his clothes and to face upwards and the other spat into his eyes. The assailants pulled his penis. In this close encounter he was able to see them. He fought back. The fight left him with injuries to his hand, stomach and head. He reported the matter to the chief who referred him to Kimangeti AP Camp where he lodged a complaint. The next day, he was taken to Kabras Police station where he was arrested for the offence of murdering Boniface and attempting to murder PW1.
6.The trial court (M.L. Nabibya, Ag. SRM) believed the testimony of the prosecution witnesses and rejected the defence. The learned magistrate observed:
7.After reevaluating the evidence, the High Court (Sitati. J) concurred with the findings of the trial court. When we read the submissions of the appellant, we are not told why we should fault those concurrent findings. The evidence of the prosecution witnesses was consistent and their accounts of what happened on that night supported each other. We agree with Mr Okango, learned counsel for the respondent, that it was most improbable that this was a case of self-defence when the appellant pursued the complainant right into the home of PW2. This, even after inflicting serious injuries on him by the roadside.
8.The testimony of Sifuna Kizito (PW3), a clinical officer at Malava District Hospital, was that those injuries were a cut wound across the left side of the face from the lower mandible to the maxilla measuring ½ cm and 6 ½ cm x ½ cm deep requiring 7 stiches. He had a cut wound to his left side of the lower abdomen measuring ½ cm x 5cm long x ½ cm deep and a cut wound on the right hand (palm) of ½ cm x 2cm x ¼ cm deep. In the end however, the witness classified the injuries as harm. Notwithstanding this classification the trial court found that:
9.On its part the High Court observed:
10.We are not persuaded by the argument of the appellant that he should have been charged with the offence of assault merely because the injuries sustained by the complainant were classified as harm. Indeed, the statutory provisions that create the offence of attempted murder do not require that the subject of the attack should suffer any harm or injury at all for the offence to be established. Section 220 of the Penal Code reads:220.Attempt to murderAny person who—a.attempts unlawfully to cause the death of another; orb.with intent unlawfully to cause the death of another does any act, or omits to do any act which it is his duty to do, such act or omission being of such a nature as to be likely to endanger human life, is guilty of a felony and is liable to imprisonment for life.
11.The nature of the attack, the type of weapon deployed and target of the blows are important in assessing the motive of the appellant. Using a panga he struck and cut the complainant several times. The blows were targeted at the rib cage and the neck of the complainant. The intention of the appellant was to kill or permanently maim the complainant and he should not get off with a less serious offence merely because the complainant was lucky to suffer much less serious injuries than would in all probability have been the likely outcome of the savage attack. We affirm the finding of the two courts below that the prosecution successfully proved the offence of attempted murder and that marks the end of the road for the appeal against conviction.
12.The law is that for purposes of a second appeal, a challenge to severity of sentence is a question of fact which cannot be entertained in a second appeal (Section 361 (1) (a) of the Criminal Procedure Code). Just as at the High Court, the Appellant has, before us, raised the issue of the severity of the life sentence imposed against him. In paragraph 3 of the High Court decision, the learned Judge identified this as a ground of appeal as follows:
13.For some reason this ground appears to have completely escaped the attention of the learned Judge who neither discussed nor made a determination on it. Because of this omission the issue of sentence takes on a shade of a question of law and is properly before us.
14.The easy thing for us to do is to remit the question of sentence to the High Court for consideration. But we are concerned at the possible injustice this would cause to the appellant. The appellant was first arraigned before the trial court on January 14, 2014. He was convicted and sentence to serve life imprisonment 8 months later on September 19, 2014. The record of the trial court shows that he was in custody throughout the trial. The first appeal was determined on March 28, 2017 and all this while the appellant has been serving a jail term.
15.It is now about 9 years since the appellant lost his freedom and it would only be just that he knows his fate without further delay. Fortunately, we have enough material before us upon which we can determine whether the sentence imposed was harsh and excessive. A person convicted of the offence of attempted murder contrary to section 220 (a) of the Penal Code is liable to imprisonment for life. Life imprisonment is the harshest sentence possible for the offence and should be left to the most depraved of circumstances. Here, whilst the appellant attempted to kill the complainant and indeed caused him injuries, the injuries were described as harm by the clinical doctor. This may not be one of the most ferocious attempts of murder that we shall hear of. We also consider that the appellant was only 21 years old at the time the sentence was imposed. We are minded to interfere with it to give him a second chance in life.
16.The upshot is that the appeal on conviction fails but the one on sentence succeeds. The sentence of life imprisonment is set aside and in its place the appellant is sentenced to a prison term of 20 years with effect from January 14, 2014 as he has been in custody or serving a prison term from that day (Section 333 (2) of the Criminal Procedure Code.) Those are our orders.
DATED AND DELIVERED AT KISUMU THIS 6TH DAY OF OCTOBER, 2023.P.O. KIAGE.................................JUDGE OF APPEALF. TUIYOTT.................................JUDGE OF APPEALW. KORIR.................................JUDGE OF APPEALI certify that this is a true copy of the original.DEPUTY REGISTRAR.