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REX
V.
JAMES ANUKU
THE WEST AFRICAN COURT OF APPEAL HOLDE AT LAGOS, NIGERIA
27TH DAY OF APRIL, 1940
2PLR/1940/49 (WACA)
OTHER CITATION(S)
2PLR/1940/49 (WACA)
(1940) VI WACA PP. 91 – 92
LEX (1940) – VI WACA PP. 91 – 92
BEFORE THEIR LORDSHIPS:
DONALD KINGDON, C.J., NIGERIA
PETRIDES, C.J., GOLD COAST
GRAHAM PAUL, C.J., SIERRA LEONE
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BETWEEN:
REX — Respondent
AND
JAMES ANUKU — Appellant
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REPRESENTATION
Ian F. Cameron — for Appellant
C. N. S. Pollard — for Crown
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ISSUE(S) FROM THE CAUSE(S) OF ACTION
CRIMINAL LAW AND PROCEDURE:- Murder — Sufficiency of evidence in support of plea of insanity — The Trial Judge held that the prisoner was not a mentally normal person but the evidence was not sufficiently explicit to establish a defence of insanity
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DECISION(S) OF THE WEST AFRICAN COURT OF APPEAL
Held that:
Following R. v. True, 16 Criminal Appeal Report. p. 167 that the Judge was entitled to say that the facts taken as a whole satisfied him that at the time of the act the prisoner was not insane. Appeal dismissed.
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MAIN JUDGMENT
The following joint judgment was delivered:-
KINGDON, C.J., NIGERIA; PETRIDES, C.J., GOLD COAST; AND GRAHAM PAUL, C.J., SIERRA LEONE.
The grounds of appeal relied upon at the hearing of this appeal were:-
1. The learned Trial Judge misdirected himself as to the sufficiency of the evidence before the Court in support of the plea of insanity, and
2. That the murder was committed when accused was suffering from insanity.
In his summing up, the Judge reviewed all the evidence relied on by Counsel in the Court below as to insanity. He then examined section 28 of the Criminal Code and came to the conclusion that the evidence fell far short of the requirements of that section. He went on to say –
“I believe on the evidence and after observing prisoner in Court that he is not a mentally normal person, but the evidence as to his condition at the time is not nearly sufficiently explicit to establish the defence of insanity …”
We have been asked to hold that, on the evidence given at the trial, the Judge ought to have found the appellant guilty but insane.
In the case of Ronald True, 16 C.A.R. at page167, the present Lord Chief Justice of England, delivering the judgment of the Court of Criminal Appeal, said:-
“On behalf of the appellant it is said, first, that the verdict which the jury gave was against the weight of the evidence; and in particular under that head of objection it is said that, as certain medical witnesses were called on the part of the defence to say that the appellant was not only insane after the commission of the act but was certifiably insane when he was said to have committed it, and as no medical evidence was called to contradict that view, therefore the jury were bound to accept it.
“In the opinion of the Court that contention is not sound. The jury were entitled to say that the facts of the case, taken as a whole, apart from any question whether the prosecution called medical evidence upon the special point, satisfied them that at the date of the committing of the act the prisoner was not insane.”
We are satisfied that there was nothing unsatisfactory in the summing up. The Judge was entitled to say that the facts of the case, taken as a whole, satisfied him that at the date of committing the act the prisoner was not insane. We are not prepared to reverse his finding of fact.
For these reasons the appeal is dismissed.
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