HC: Criminal Division (Uganda)

The Criminal Division is Responsible for hearing all serious criminal offences referred to it by the Magistrates' Courts. According to the Principal Judge's Circular, except for Commercial Court Judges who must attend to only Commercial Court cases, the rest of the Judges of the High Court who are based in Kampala are members of the Criminal Division irrespective of the other Divisions of the High Court that they belong to.

Each of the above judges is supposed to do, at least, one High Court Criminal Session in a year at Kampala

Physical address
High Court Building at Plot 2, the Square.
164 judgments
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164 judgments
Citation
Judgment date
December 2022
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.
21 December 2022
20 December 2022
20 December 2022
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.
19 December 2022
16 December 2022
November 2022
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.
30 November 2022
30 November 2022
29 November 2022
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.
23 November 2022
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.
17 November 2022
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.
15 November 2022
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.
15 November 2022
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).
15 November 2022
10 November 2022
4 November 2022
4 November 2022
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.
2 November 2022
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.
2 November 2022
October 2022
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.
28 October 2022
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.
25 October 2022
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.
25 October 2022
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.
19 October 2022
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.
19 October 2022
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.
19 October 2022
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.
19 October 2022
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.
18 October 2022
13 October 2022
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.
12 October 2022
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
11 October 2022
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.
11 October 2022
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.
10 October 2022
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.
10 October 2022
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.
7 October 2022
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.
7 October 2022
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.
7 October 2022
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.
7 October 2022
September 2022
30 September 2022
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.
28 September 2022
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.
28 September 2022
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.
28 September 2022
16 September 2022
16 September 2022
16 September 2022
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.
15 September 2022
August 2022
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.
23 August 2022
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.
20 August 2022
18 August 2022
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.
17 August 2022
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.
16 August 2022
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.
15 August 2022