Barno & 4 others v Director of Public Prosecution (Anti-Corruption and Economic Crimes Revision E005 of 2023) [2023] KEHC 18788 (KLR) (Anti-Corruption and Economic Crimes) (22 June 2023) (Judgment)
Neutral citation:
[2023] KEHC 18788 (KLR)
Republic of Kenya
Anti-Corruption and Economic Crimes Revision E005 of 2023
EN Maina, J
June 22, 2023
Between
David Some Barno
1st Applicant
Esther Chebet Barno
2nd Applicant
Dasahe Investment Limited
3rd Applicant
Keibukwo Investment Limited
4th Applicant
Olomotit Estate Limited
5th Applicant
and
Director of Public Prosecution
Respondent
(Being an application for revision against the Ruling of Hon. E K. Nyutu SPM delivered on 22nd May 2023 in Anti-Corruption Chief Magistrates’ Court at Nairobi, ACC No. 33 of 2018; Republic vs. Mohamed Swazuri Abdalla and 16 others)
Judgment
1.The applicants herein being dissatisfied with the ruling of the trial court that rejected the Respondent’s application to withdraw the criminal prosecution facing them in Chief Magistrates Court ACC No. 33 of 2018 filed this revision application seeking to have the ruling overturned.
2.The application is made by way of a Notice of Motion datedJune 9, 2023and is supported by the affidavit of David Some Barno (the 1st Applicant) sworn on even date. It is expressed to be brought under articles 10, 48, 157(6)(c), 157(11) and 159 of the Constitution and sections 87 (a), 362 and 364(1) of the Criminal Procedure Code.
3.The grounds for the application are stated to be that:-
4.The above grounds are reiterated in the supporting affidavit.
5.This being an application for revision which is fairly straight- forward this court saw no need to hear the parties (see section 365 of the Criminal Procedure Code) which states:-
6.The decision not to hear the parties is more especially because the application is made by the accused persons themselves and as such no adverse ruling is envisaged to be made against them. Moreover, what is impugned is the decision of the trial court but not the decision of the Respondent. The Respondent being the party that made an application that was dismissed by the court it would have been a misnomer for this court to ask it to respond to the application.
7.The genesis of this application is the Notice of Motion dated March 29, 2023 which the Deputy Director of Public Prosecutions Jacinta Nyamosi filed in Chief Magistrates court ACC No. 33 of 2018 which has seventeen accused persons including the Applicants herein. By the Notice of Motion, the Deputy Director of Public Prosecutions sought leave to withdraw the charges against the 13th,14th,15th,16th and 17th accused persons now the Applicants herein.
8.The gravamen of the application was that the Director of Public Prosecutions had reviewed the evidence in its possession and come to the conclusion that it was necessary to review the decision to charge the applicants and it was therefore in the interest of justice that permission to withdraw the charges be granted.
9.The trial Magistrate upon considering the application delivered a reasoned ruling dated May 22, 2023. In which it dismissed the application, trial magistrate having come to the conclusion that it did not meet the threshold set out in article 157 (11) of the Constitution; that it was neither in the public interest or in the interest of the administration of justice to withdraw the charges; that the public had a stake in the case as the same involved public funds and the public interest behooved the case to be heard on merit and the innocence or guilt of the accused persons be established on sound principles of law; that the timing of the discretion to make the application to withdraw the charges five(5) years and twenty three (23) witnesses later and at the tail end of the prosecution case does not fall within the rules of reason and justice as envisaged in settled precedent; that it is the legitimate expectation of the public to see justice is done and the case must therefore come to a logical and meritorious conclusion where any acquittal or conviction is purely on the basis of evidence placed before the court and not on any other short cut. Further that it had not been demonstrated to the court that the charges against the applicants are an abuse of the court process; that it is curious that the new evidence which suddenly emerged at the tail end could not be placed before the court so that it could make an independent decision; that the timing of the application was an abuse of the court process as it had a direct bearing on the legal maxim that justice must not only be done but it must be seen to be done.
Analysis and determination
10.The power of the Director of Public Prosecutions to terminate a prosecution derives from section 87 of the Criminal Procedure Code and article 157 (6) (c) of the Constitution which provide:-
- Section 87 of the Criminal Procedure Code:-
- In a trial before a subordinate court a public prosecutor may, with the consent of the court or on the instructions of the Director of Public Prosecutions, at any [Rev. 2012] Criminal Procedure Code cap. 75 C44 - 38 [Issue 1] time before judgment is pronounced, withdraw from the prosecution of any person,”
- Article 157 of the Constitution: -
11.Whereas the Director of Public Prosecutions does not exercise his powers or functions under the direct or control of any person or authority bothsection 87 of the Criminal Procedure Code and article 157 (8) of the Constitution requires him to seek the consent/permission of the court to discontinue a prosecution. Sub-article (8) states:-
12.The above being the position the power to terminate/withdraw a criminal case even under Section 87 of the Criminal Procedure Code may only be exercised in accordance with article 157 (8) of the Constitution and no prosecution can be determined without the permission of the court.
13.Article 157(8) of the Constitution does not detail the conditions which a court must consider when faced with an application for withdrawal by the Director of Public Prosecution and such leave is therefore in the discretion of the court and whereas there is no fetter to that discretion it is trite that the discretion of a court must always be exercised judicially. The discretion is not to be exercised unreasonably.
14.In this case trial court considered the application by the Director of Public Prosecution and in the exercise of that discretion it rejected the application. What this court is being invited to do therefore is to determine whether the trial magistrate exercised her discretion correctly and to interfere with that exercise of discretion if it finds otherwise.
15.It has long been established that an appellate court will not interfere with the discretion of the trial court “unless it is satisfied that the court in exercising its discretion misdirected itself in some matters and as a result arrived at a wrong, decision that was erroneously or unless it is manifest from the case as a whole that the judge was clearly wrong in the exercise of his discretion and that as a result there has been a misjustice;…”(see the case of Mbogo & another v Shah [1968] EA P.93).
16.The Supreme Court of Kenya has reiterated the above principle in several cases. In the case of Apungu Arthur Kibira v Independent & Electoral Boundaries Commission & 3 others [2019] eKLR the court stated:-
17.I have perused the impugned ruling. The trial magistrate addressed her mind to the principles which would have correctly guided her in determining whether or not to grant permission to the Director of Public Prosecutions to terminate the case as against the Applicants. I am unable to find that the trial magistrate’s discretion was exercised whimsically or unreasonably or that she took into account an irrelevant factor or ignored a relevant factor. It is also my finding that the Applicants shall not suffer grave injustice as the trial court is enjoined to ensure that their right to a fair trial is observed until the end of the trial. Moreover, in the event that the charges against the Applicants are not proved to the required standard then the court will have no choice but to acquit them.
18.Moreover, in considering an application for revision under section 382 of the Criminal Procedure Code and bearing in mind that this is not a general appeal, this court is enjoined to satisfy itself only as to the correctness, legality or propriety of the finding of the trial court. I have not seen anything incorrect, illegal, improper or irregular about the decision of the trial magistrate as would warrant this court to interfere with her decision.
19.In the upshot I find no merit in this application and the same is dismissed.
SIGNED, DATED AND DELIVERED ELECTRONICALLY ON THIS 22ND DAY OF JUNE 2023.E N MAINAJUDGE
for withdrawal of charges was being made after five (5) years and after 23 witnesses had testified. In this construct the. Honourable Court erred in the following basic respects: