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Citation
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Judgment date
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| December 2022 |
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Applicant failed to show sufficient cause to reinstate a criminal appeal dismissed for want of prosecution after unreasonable delay.
* Criminal procedure – Dismissal for want of prosecution – Section 44 Criminal Procedure Code Act – failure to take necessary steps and no application for extension of time.
* Reinstatement of appeal – discretionary relief – Shah v. Mbogo – excusable mistake versus deliberate delay.
* Delay and abuse of court process – excessive and unexplained delay disentitles party to equitable relief.
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21 December 2022 |
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20 December 2022 |
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20 December 2022 |
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Appeal dismissed: convictions for assault and criminal trespass upheld; child witness competent and one‑year sentence appropriate.
* Criminal law – Assault occasioning actual bodily harm – proof of assault, harm and intention; burden of proof on prosecution.
* Criminal law – Criminal trespass – elements: intentional/unlawful entry, lack of authorization, unlawful purpose or intent to intimidate.
* Evidence – Child witnesses – competence and admissibility under Evidence Act and Magistrates Court Act (s101(3)); voir dire not always required.
* Sentencing – Appellate interference – only where sentence is illegal or manifestly excessive or wrong in principle.
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19 December 2022 |
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16 December 2022 |
| November 2022 |
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Criminal proceedings over disputed land were stayed pending civil determination to prevent abuse of court process.
* Criminal procedure – supervisory jurisdiction – High Court power under Sections 48 and 50 Criminal Procedure Code and Section 17 Judicature Act to examine and stay magistrates’ records.
* Civil v. criminal – land ownership disputes (kibanja v registered title) should be resolved in civil proceedings; criminalisation may constitute abuse of process.
* Magistrates Courts Act s.209 – prohibition on proceeding where matter is directly and substantially in issue in a previously instituted suit between same parties.
* Article 120 – DPP duties to consider public interest and prevent abuse of legal process.
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30 November 2022 |
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30 November 2022 |
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29 November 2022 |
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Circumstantial and identification evidence established the accused’s participation and malice in a fatal group assault, justifying a murder conviction.
* Criminal law – Murder – Elements: death, unlawfulness, malice aforethought, participation. * Identification evidence – quality tested by lighting, distance, duration and familiarity; circumstantial evidence can supply gaps in direct ID. * Alibi – accused’s alibi does not shift burden; prosecution must disprove beyond reasonable doubt.
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23 November 2022 |
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Appellant’s conviction for burning crops upheld; imprisonment and compensation maintained but the fine set aside.
Criminal law – Malicious damage to property – Elements: ownership, destruction, intent, unlawfulness; identification evidence; corroboration by investigatory and agricultural expert evidence; sentencing – appellate interference limited; fine set aside where imposed with imprisonment without default provision.
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17 November 2022 |
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Circumstantial and eyewitness evidence, plus fatal blunt‑force injuries, supported conviction for murder under sections 188–189 PCA.
Criminal law – Murder – elements of murder (death, unlawfulness, malice aforethought, participation) – malice inferred from nature of injuries and conduct – circumstantial evidence and single competent witness – credibility and minor contradictions – adverse inference from flight/avoidance.
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15 November 2022 |
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Accused convicted of aggravated robbery based on reliable identification and medical evidence of hammer-inflicted grievous harm.
* Criminal law – Aggravated robbery – elements: theft; violence; deadly weapon; participation. * Identification evidence – recognition of familiar faces at night; proximity and lighting as reliability factors. * Medical evidence – grievous harm (CT scan fracture) corroborating use of hammer. * Evidence Act s156 – prior statement corroboration of identification.
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15 November 2022 |
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Familiarity-based identification and medical evidence established guilt for aggravated robbery involving a hammer.
Criminal law – Aggravated robbery – elements: theft, violence and deadly weapon, participation; identification evidence – recognition of familiar faces at night; medical evidence corroborating grievous harm; hammer as deadly weapon under s.286(2).
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15 November 2022 |
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10 November 2022 |
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4 November 2022 |
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4 November 2022 |
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Accomplice confessions corroborated by scene evidence sustain convictions for murder and kidnap; one accused acquitted.
Criminal law – Murder – suffocation and strangulation – malice aforethought inferred from manner of killing; Kidnap with intent to murder – asportation and intent; Evidence – accomplice/confession evidence – warning and corroboration; Admissibility and reliability – allegations of torture and coerced statements; Joint enterprise/common intention – participation and liability.
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2 November 2022 |
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Accomplice confessions corroborated by scene and forensic evidence led to convictions for murder and kidnap; one accused acquitted.
* Criminal law – Murder – Malice aforethought inferred from manner of killing (superglue sealing of airways, strangulation) and post-mortem findings. * Evidence – Accomplice/confession evidence – charge-and-caution statements and recorded reconstruction admissible where corroborated. * Evidence – Corroboration – photos, scene recovery, phone cover and reconstruction corroborated accomplice accounts. * Criminal law – Kidnap with intent to murder – asportation against will with knowledge/intention to kill established. * Liability – Common intention and joint participation established for multiple accused; one accused acquitted for lack of participation.
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2 November 2022 |
| October 2022 |
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Prosecution proved death and malice but failed to prove the accuseds’ participation; accused acquitted due to insufficient corroboration.
* Criminal law – Murder – elements: death, unlawful killing, malice aforethought, causation, participation and common intention. * Burden and standard of proof – prosecution must establish every ingredient beyond reasonable doubt. * Dying declaration – admissible but weak and generally requires corroboration. * Circumstantial evidence and mob-justice cases – need for clear evidence placing accused at the fatal act. * Trial on Indictments – prima facie case and accused’s right to silence.
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28 October 2022 |
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Accused convicted where prosecution proved theft, use of deadly weapons (panga and carbofuran) and reliable eyewitness identification.
* Criminal law – Aggravated robbery – Elements: theft, use of deadly weapon, participation – Prosecution must prove each element beyond reasonable doubt.
* Evidentiary law – Identification evidence – need for caution; reliability assessed via proximity, lighting, duration and familiarity.
* Forensic evidence – Toxicology – carbofuran in food admissible and may constitute a 'deadly weapon' under Penal Code s.286(3).
* Weapons – metallic panga‑like implements and poisonous substances can both qualify as deadly weapons.
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25 October 2022 |
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Whether identification and toxicological proof of panga-like implements and carbofuran established the accused's guilt.
* Criminal law – Aggravated robbery – Elements: theft, use of deadly weapon, participation. * Deadly weapon – panga-like metallic implements and carbofuran (Furadan) pesticide in food qualify as deadly weapons. * Identification – reliability of identification from close-range, prolonged observation; cautionary directions considered. * Forensic evidence – toxicology (GC-MS) confirming presence of carbofuran in food.
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25 October 2022 |
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Mandatory bail under Article 23(6)(c) is not available once an accused has been committed to the High Court.
* Constitutional law – Bail – Article 23(6)(c) – mandatory release after 180 days' remand where offence triable only by the High Court – effect of committal to High Court – Clause 10(3) Practice Directions: High Court sole forum to grant mandatory bail.
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19 October 2022 |
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A person committed to the High Court is not eligible for mandatory bail under Article 23(6)(c).
* Constitutional law – Bail – Article 23(6)(c) mandatory release after 180 days' remand – effect of committal to the High Court – Practice Directions Clause 10(3) limits grant of mandatory bail to the High Court.
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19 October 2022 |
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An accused committed to the High Court is not eligible for mandatory bail under Article 23(6)(c).
* Constitutional law – Article 23(6)(c) – mandatory bail after 180 days' remand for offences triable only by the High Court; * Practice Directions – Clause 10(3) – mandatory release to be granted only by the High Court; * Effect of committal/indictment – committal to High Court removes eligibility for Article 23(6)(c) mandatory bail.
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19 October 2022 |
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Accused convicted of murder and aggravated robbery on circumstantial evidence and threats; sentenced to 35 years (29y7m effective).
Criminal law – Murder – malice aforethought established by extensive torture and strangulation; Aggravated robbery – theft by violence causing death; Circumstantial evidence – recovery of accused’s personal effects in victim’s broken premises and prior threats as proof of participation; Sentence – lengthy deterrent term with remand credit.
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19 October 2022 |
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Court convicted three accused of murder and aggravated robbery based on eyewitness, forensic and circumstantial evidence.
Criminal law – Murder (elements: death, unlawfulness, malice aforethought, participation); Aggravated robbery (theft, violence/deadly weapon, causing death, participation); Identification evidence at night – reliability factors; Forensic corroboration – canine tracking and soil/elemental analysis; Effect of proven lies and inconsistent alibis on credibility.
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18 October 2022 |
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13 October 2022 |
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Accused convicted of aggravated robbery; identity and grievous harm proven despite no identification parade.
* Criminal law – Aggravated robbery – elements: theft, violence, deadly weapon/grievous harm, participation/identification. * Identification – victim’s contemporaneous observation and prior encounters can render identification reliable; failure to conduct identification parade not necessarily fatal. * Medical evidence – P. Exh.2 supported grievous harm and use of a weapon. * Sentence – deterrent custody with remand credit and compensation ordered.
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12 October 2022 |
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Conviction quashed where prosecution failed to prove criminal trespass and did not negative bona fide claim of right.
* Criminal law – Criminal trespass (s.302(a) P.C.A.) – elements: entry, possession, unlawfulness, intent to intimidate/annoy/commit offence
* Defence – Bona fide claim of right (s.7 P.C.A.) – prosecution’s burden to negative the defence
* Land law – Local councils cannot confer legal ownership; competing land claims are civil matters
* Burden of proof – prosecution must prove criminal intent beyond reasonable doubt
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11 October 2022 |
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Conviction quashed where trial court failed to evaluate defences and prosecution failed to investigate or rebut alibi and accident.
Criminal law – Malicious damage to property – Elements of offence and mens rea – Defence of accident/claim of right negating mens rea – Alibi – duty of prosecution to disprove – Lone identification requiring corroboration where bias exists – Inadequate investigation vitiating conviction.
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11 October 2022 |
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Prosecution failed to prove a sexual act beyond reasonable doubt; accused acquitted of aggravated defilement.
* Criminal law – Aggravated defilement – Elements: victim under 14, sexual act, accused’s participation – necessity to prove each element beyond reasonable doubt.
* Medical evidence – a ruptured hymen and tenderness may be corroborative but absence of evidence of recent intercourse can create reasonable doubt.
* Burden of proof – where reasonable doubt exists, it must be resolved for the accused; acquittal follows if any essential element is not proved.
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10 October 2022 |
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Accused acquitted of aggravated defilement: age proven but sexual act not established beyond reasonable doubt.
* Criminal law – Aggravated defilement – elements: victim under 14; sexual act; accused's participation.
* Evidentiary proof – medical evidence cannot alone establish recent intercourse; must be considered with testimonial evidence.
* Burden of proof – prosecution must establish every essential element beyond reasonable doubt; doubts resolved in favour of accused.
* Acquittal appropriate where essential element (sexual act) not proved.
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10 October 2022 |
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Single eyewitness identification and forensic injuries proved murder; accused convicted and sentenced to 25 years (18 years 6 months after remand credit).
* Criminal law – Murder – Elements: death, unlawful act, malice aforethought, accused’s participation. * Identification – Single eyewitness evidence – reliability, caution and corroboration. * Sentencing – death penalty discretionary; first offender mitigation and remission for remand time.
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7 October 2022 |
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A1 convicted of murder on DNA and corroborating evidence; A2 acquitted due to uncorroborated accomplice statement and a credible alibi.
Criminal law – Murder – elements of murder (death, unlawfulness, malice aforethought) – Forensic DNA evidence as corroboration – Charge and caution statements and accomplice evidence – Corroboration requirement – Alibi defence and burden to disprove – Evidence tampering.
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7 October 2022 |
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Prosecution proved aggravated robbery by reliable identification, agreed documentary exhibits and injuries; four accused convicted and heavily sentenced.
Criminal law – Aggravated robbery – elements: theft; use of force; use/possession of deadly weapon – identification evidence – Section 66 Evidence Act (agreed facts) – proof of weapon without recovery – sentencing and remission for time on remand.
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7 October 2022 |
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Circumstantial evidence and unrefuted alibis meant prosecution failed to link the accused to the murder beyond reasonable doubt.
Criminal law – Murder – Elements: death, unlawfulness, malice aforethought – Circumstantial evidence – Requirement to exclude other reasonable hypotheses – Burden to disprove alibi – Need for medical/forensic corroboration of alleged injuries.
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7 October 2022 |
| September 2022 |
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30 September 2022 |
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Appeal dismissed; acquittal upheld where prosecution failed to prove intention amid provocation and family grudges.
* Criminal law – Assault occasioning actual bodily harm (s.236 Penal Code Act) – proof of mens rea – medical evidence of injury insufficient without proof of intention or recklessness.
* Evidence – Credibility – effect of deep-seated grudges on witness credibility and the need for caution when assessing prosecution witnesses.
* Appellate review – First appellate court duty to reappraise and draw independent inferences from the evidence.
* Defence – Provocation/scuffle as a defence negating intentional assault.
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28 September 2022 |
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Sole witness evidence failed to establish a prima facie case; accused discharged under s.73(1) TIA.
Criminal law – aggravated robbery – sufficiency of evidence – prima facie case – failure to call victim and arresting witnesses – non-exhibition of alleged stolen property – no prima facie case; discharge under s.73(1) TIA.
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28 September 2022 |
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Accused convicted of two murders based on post‑mortems and corroborative evidence; acquitted of aggravated robbery; sentenced to long concurrent terms.
* Criminal law – Murder – Elements: death, unlawfulness, malice aforethought and participation – proved by post‑mortem, confession and corroborative conduct.
* Criminal law – Corroboration – Confessional/extra‑judicial statement of a co‑accused corroborated by disappearance and concealment of property.
* Criminal law – Aggravated robbery – Failure to prove theft and requisite elements; acquittal on robbery count.
* Sentencing – Death penalty avoided; lengthy concurrent prison terms imposed with remand credit.
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28 September 2022 |
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16 September 2022 |
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16 September 2022 |
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16 September 2022 |
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Orders freezing the applicant's bank accounts made by a court without territorial jurisdiction were set aside as null and void.
Criminal procedure – Jurisdiction – Territorial jurisdiction of magistrates’ courts – Magistrates Courts (Magisterial Areas) Instrument, 2017 – Orders made by a court lacking statutory jurisdiction are void – Revision to set aside impugned freezing orders.
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15 September 2022 |
| August 2022 |
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Revision permitted pre-conclusion; accused’s right to be heard violated but criminal trial not stayed; accused ordered to lead defence.
Criminal procedure – Revision under sections 48 and 50 CPC – Revision available pre-conclusion to correct irregularities; Fair hearing – closure of defence and denial of right to give evidence; Stay of criminal proceedings – interplay with related civil suit; Judicial supervision – High Court inherent powers under Judicature Act s.17.
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23 August 2022 |
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Applicant’s bail pending trial for aggravated defilement refused due to missing case file and seriousness of the offence.
Bail pending trial; aggravated defilement (seriousness and flight risk); judicial discretion under Trial on Indictments Act s.14; presumption of innocence and personal liberty; need for main case file/particulars to assess bail applications; role of fixed abode and sound sureties.
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20 August 2022 |
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18 August 2022 |
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Revision cannot be used to challenge the merits of a magistrate’s conviction; appeal, not revision, is the remedy.
* Criminal procedure – Revision jurisdiction – Scope limited to errors, illegality or irregularity in magistrates’ proceedings – Not a substitute for appeal.
* Criminal procedure – Disguised appeal – Revision petition barred where petitioner could have appealed but did not.
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17 August 2022 |
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An ownership dispute over a vehicle is a civil matter; criminal convictions based on unresolved civil ownership were quashed.
Criminal law – Theft and obtaining by false pretence – Ownership disputes – Civil vs criminal jurisdiction – Burden of proof – Honest claim of right (Penal Code s.7) – Pending civil suit over same property.
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16 August 2022 |
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Child’s unsworn testimony corroborated by medical and eyewitness evidence sustains aggravated defilement conviction.
* Criminal law – Aggravated defilement – elements: victim under 14, sexual act (penetration), accused’s responsibility; corroboration required for unsworn child evidence under s.40(3) Trial on Indictments Act; medical evidence (ruptured hymen, bruising) and eyewitness account can provide necessary corroboration.
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15 August 2022 |