JOSEPHINE ANI V. THE STATE
(2002) LPELR-489(SC)
In The Supreme Court of
Nigeria
On Thursday, the 30th day of
May, 2002
SC.315/2001
Before Their Lordships
ABUBAKAR BASHIR WALI Justice
of The Supreme Court of Nigeria
UTHMAN MOHAMMED Justice of
The Supreme Court of Nigeria
ANTHONY IKECHUKWU IGUH
Justice of The Supreme Court of Nigeria
ALOYSIUS IYORGYER KATSINA-ALU
Justice of The Supreme Court of Nigeria
EMMANUEL OLAYINKA AYOOLA
Justice of The Supreme Court of Nigeria
Between
JOSEPHINE ANI
Appellant(s)
AND
THE STATE
Respondent(s)
Other Citations
Ani v. State (2002) 10 NWLR
(Pt.776)644
(2002) 5 S.C (Pt.I) 33
RATIO DECIDENDI
1. CRIMINAL LAW AND PROCEDURE
- Insanity cases: Duty of trial Judge
"It is to be borne in
mind that in insanity cases, the Judge must consider the behaviour of the
accused at the time of the killing as well as after the killing. See Kure v.
The State (1988) 1 NWLR (Pt. 71) 404; Ishola Karimu v. The State (1989) 1 NWLR
(pt.96) 124 SC; (1989) 1 SC 121 at 134." Per Katsina-Alu, J.S.C (Pp.
10-11, paras. G-A) (...read in context)
2. CRIMINAL LAW AND PROCEDURE
- Defence of Insanity: Whether absence
of motive of crime infers insanity
"Mere absence of any
evidence of motive for a crime is not sufficient ground upon which to infer
insanity. See R. v. Ashigifuwo (supra)." Per Katsina-Alu, J.S.C (P. 10,
para. F) (...read in context)
3. CRIMINAL LAW AND PROCEDURE
- Defence of Insanity: Proof of defence
of Insanity
"In order, therefore, to
establish the defence of insanity, the defence must first show that the accused
was at the relevant time, suffering from either mental disease or from a
"natural mental infirmity." Then it must be established that the
mental disease, or the natural mental infirmity as the case may be, was such
that, at the relevant time, the accused was, as a result deprived of capacity:
(a) to understand what he was doing; or (b) to control his actions; or (c) to
know that he ought not to do the act or make the omission." See R. v.
Omoni 12 WACA 511." Per Katsina-Alu, J.S.C (P. 8, paras. B-E) (...read in
context)
4. CRIMINAL LAW AND PROCEDURE
- Defence of Insanity: On whom lies the
onus of proof of insanity?
"Where an accused pleads
insanity, the onus is on him to produce evidence of insanity. In the instant
case the onus was on the appellant to establish insanity. See Udofia v. The
State (1981) 11-12 SC 49." Per Katsina-Alu, J.S.C (P. 7, paras. D-E)
(...read in context)
5. CRIMINAL LAW AND PROCEDURE
- Defence of Insanity: What constitutes
the defence of insanity
"Every person is, unless
the contrary is proved, presumed by law to be sane, and to be accountable for
his actions. But if there is an incapacity, or defect of the understanding, as
there can be no consent of the will, the act is not punishable as a crime.
Whether the accused was sane or insane in the legal sense at the time when the
act was committed is a question of fact to be decided by the trial judge and
not by medical men however eminent, and is dependent upon the previous and
contemporaneous acts of the accused. See R. v. Revitt, 34 Cr. App. R 87."
Per Katsina-Alu, J.S.C (P. 7, paras. A-D) (...read in context)
6. CRIMINAL LAW AND PROCEDURE
- Defence of Insanity: Standard of Proof
required to prove insanity
"This burden on the
accused to prove his insanity, however, is merely as in civil cases, that is to
say, on the balance of probability or the preponderance of evidence. See R. v.
William Echem (1952) 14 WACA 158, R. v. Matthew Onakpoya (1959) SCNLR 384;
(1959) 4 F.S.C. 150, Emeryl v. The State (1973) 6 S.C. 215 at 216." Per
Iguh, J.S.C (P. 18, paras. B-C) (...read in context)
7. CRIMINAL LAW AND PROCEDURE
- Defence of Insanity: Whether Court
must rely solely on medical evidence in determination or otherwise of proof of
insanity
"Although medical
evidence is usually of great assistance in the establishment of insanity, a Judge
may none the less make up his mind on the issue inspite of such expert
evidence, taking into consideration the totality of all the evidence tendered
before the court. However, due weight ordinarily ought to be attached to such
medical evidence. See R. v. Ogor (1961) 1 SCNLR 121; (1961) 1 All NLR 70, Mboho
v. The State (1966) 1 All NLR 69, Benson Madugba v. Queen (1958) SCNLR 17,
(1958) 3 FSC 1, Oden Ikpi v. The State (1976) 12 S.C. 71 etc." Per Iguh,
J.S.C (P. 18, paras. C-F) (...read in context)
8. CRIMINAL LAW AND PROCEDURE
- Defence of Insanity: Nature of
Insanity
"The law is settled that
insanity is primarily a question of fact to be determined by the trial court
which ought to take into consideration each and every admissible piece of
evidence tendered before it, including medical evidence, where available,
together with the whole of the facts and surrounding circumstances of the case,
particularly such vital facts like the nature of the killing, the conduct of
the accused before, at and immediately after the killing and any past history
of mental abnormality of the accused. See Karimu v. The State (1989) 1NWLR (Pt.
96) 140, R. v. Inyang 12WACA 5 at 7, James Anyim v. The State (1983) 1 SC NLR
370 at 377 etc." Per Iguh, J.S.C (Pp. 18-19, paras. F-B) (...read in
context)
A. I. KATSINA-ALU, J.S.C.
(Delivering the Leading Judgment): This is an appeal from a conviction for
murder. The defence raised at the trial was that of insanity. The learned trial
Judge held that the defence of insanity failed. The appellant's appeal to the
Court of Appeal was dismissed. She has further appealed to this court.
The facts of this case are not in dispute. The
appellant on the morning of 1/3/88 left her house and went to the house of PW3
Charity Ani whom the appellant described as "my friend." She met PW2
and the deceased children at home. On inquiry about PW3 and her husband, the
children told the appellant that their parents had gone to the farm. Upon
hearing this, the appellant went to a nearby mechanic workshop and picked up an
iron rod and returned to the house of PW3. The appellant first attacked Peter
aged 5 years with the iron rod. While Peter cried in pains he told Amoge aged 4
years to run for safety. The appellant hit Peter on the head with the iron rod
several times until he died. Next, the appellant pursued Amoge to a house where
she took cover under a bed. The occupant of the room on seeing the appellant,
showed the appellant where Amoge was hiding. The appellant then dragged Amoge
out from under the bed. She hit Amoge repeatedly with the iron rod until she
died. Thereafter the appellant chased PW2 who ran to the motor park for help.
When the appellant saw a policeman (PW4) she ran. PW4 however chased her,
caught up with her and arrested her and took her in for questioning. That was
when she made exhibit B confessional statement to the police.
The lone issue for determination raised by the
appellant is whether or not the lower court was right in affirming that the
defence of insanity did not avail the appellant.
Every person is, unless the
contrary is proved, presumed by law to be sane, and to be accountable for his
actions. But if there is an incapacity, or defect of the understanding, as
there can be no consent of the will, the act is not punishable as a crime.
Whether the accused was sane or insane in the legal sense at the time when the
act was committed is a question of fact to be decided by the trial Judge and
not by medical men however eminent, and is dependent upon the previous and
contemporaneous acts of the accused. See R. v. Revitt, 34 Cr. App. R 87.
Where an accused pleads
insanity, the onus is on him to produce evidence of insanity. In the instant
case the onus was on the appellant to establish insanity. See Udofia v. The
State (1981) 11-12 SC 49. Although plainly there was no apparent motive for the
gruesome murder, the law is that mere absence of any evidence of motive for a
crime is not sufficient ground upon which to infer mania see R. v. Ashigifuwo
12 WACA 389. The absence of motive is at most a matter to be taken into
consideration when there is no other evidence indicative of insanity rather
than the opposite - Ayinde v. The Queen (1963) 2 SCNLR 362; (1963) 1 All NLR
393.
It is to be observed that the
law on the subject to which the court must address its mind is section 28 of
the criminal code. The section provides that a person, "is not criminally
responsible for an act ......if at the time of doing the act.....he is in such
a state of mental disease or natural mental infirmity as to deprive him of
capacity to understand what he is doing or of capacity to know that he ought
not to do the act "
In order, therefore, to
establish the defence of insanity, the defence must first show that the accused
was at the relevant time, suffering from either mental disease or from a
"natural mental infirmity." Then it must be established that the
mental disease, or the natural mental infirmity as the case may be, was such
that, at the relevant time, the accused was, as a result deprived of capacity:
(a) to understand what he was doing; or
(b) to control his actions; or
(c) to know that he ought not to do the act or
make the omission." See R. v. Omoni 12 WACA 511.
So much for the law.
I now turn to the application of the law to
the facts. The defence of the appellant at her trial was, I need hardly say,
simply one of insanity. The defence called certain witnesses. The first was
Reuben Osahon consultant and psychiatrist of the psychiatrist hospital Benin
city. The sum total of his evidence is that "from the history I have given
and from the examination of the accused person there was no doubt that she was
suffering from depressive illness."
The second witness was Maria Enefome Urefe
(Mrs.), a pharmacist and technician at the prison clinic. She testified inter
alia:
"When I tried to interview the accused
person she was unable to say reasonable thing and was incoherent, accused
person was restless..."
The appellant herself gave evidence in her
defence. Her evidence, in part, reads:
''The mother of the deceased told me that she
will revenge on the husband but I advised the mother of the deceased PW3 to
live in harmony with husband despite their misunderstanding. Thereafter the PW3
informed me that she has some medicine she wanted to make so that the husband will
like her, the PW3 invited me to accompany her to the place of the native doctor
but I refused on the ground that I had never visited a native doctor since I
was born. The PW 3 said that I should not inform the husband of her mission,
due to much pressure I agreed to accompany the PW3 who said that I should accompany her to the
place of the native doctor at ring road, Benin city. Thereafter when PW3 took me to the place of the native doctor at
ring road it turned out that the person is an Hausa man. When I entered the
latter person's place PW3 said that I am
the person she has been telling the Hausa man. There the Hausa man brought out
two chairs and asked myself and PW3 to sit down and I sat near the juju. There
they told me to sit down and they will put something in my body so that the
medicine they will put in my body will make the medicine they will do for PW3
not to affect me. Thereafter the Hausa medicine man carried a juju and put it
on my head, when this medicine was put on my head I felt very different, I
could not talk again and even the way I felt I wanted to shout but could not
shout; but thereafter the Hausa man brought out a razor and put some cuts on my
hands and applied the medicine. Thereafter I became unconscious of myself and
could not even remember what the Hausa man did to me, since that date I did not
know how I left the place of the medicine man and returned to my residence. It
was after I was put in prison custody and I was being treated that I came to
know myself."
It is to be observed that the alleged visit to
the native doctor took place three months before the commission of this crime.
As I have already indicated, there was no
apparent motive for the gruesome murders of the innocent children. But it was
argued on behalf of the appellant that the court should have inferred insanity
or some mental disorder from the fact that there was no motive for the murders.
But as I have already stated, the law on this point is now settled. Mere
absence of any evidence of motive for a crime is not sufficient ground upon
which to infer insanity. See R. v. Ashigifuwo (supra).
But let us examine the evidence a little more
closely. It is to be borne in mind that in insanity cases, the Judge must
consider the behaviour of the accused at the time of the killing as well as
after the killing. See Kure v. The State (1988) 1 NWLR (Pt. 71) 404; Ishola
Karimu v. The State (1989) 1 NWLR (pt.96) 124 SC; (1989) 1 SC 121 at 134.First,
the events prior to the murders. PW2 Teresa Ogbuani was an eye witness to the
killing of her little brother and sister. In her evidence-in-chief she
testified thus:
"On 1st day of March, 1988 my father Mr.
Ogbuani went to the farm so also was my mother. On the same day the accused
came to our house and asked for my father and I told her that my father had
gone to the farm so also was my mother, thereafter the accused went to the main
road and look to both end of the road to ascertain if any person was coming -
during this period every person and our neighbours had gone to the farm leaving
only small children at home. After accused had ascertained that nobody was
coming to our house she went to a mechanic shed and accused pick up an iron rod
thereafter accused hit the iron rod, after the accused locked three of us inside
the house, myself, Amoge and Peter. As we were knocking on the door after the
accused locked us inside the house an old woman who owned the house came and
opened the door for three of us. Thereafter three of us earned food and began
to eat outside our residence, whilst there the accused came to us, pushed the
deceased Peter Ogbuani down and used the piece of iron rod she was holding to
hit him on the head several times. The deceased cried as he was being hit on
the head by the accused, and told Amoge Ogbuani to run but the accused person
after killing Peter pursued Amoge as she was running she entered the latter
woman's house as she was pursuing Amoge, the woman showed Amoge the deceased to
the accused who dragged Amoge out from under the bed and used the piece of iron
she was holding to kill the deceased Amoge in the woman's house, after accused
had killed Amoge I began to run ,and the accused began to pursue me. I ran to
the motor park and went and called some person at the park who pursued the accused
and caught her. When those persons caught the accused they held her and used
some rope to tie her hand. The accused person was later taken away by a
policeman."
PW 4 sgt. Joseph Irumudimam was the IPO. In
his evidence, he said:
"Immediately the accused saw me she began
to run away, I pursued the accused and arrested the accused person with the
iron rod. I later took the accused to the Esigie police station for
investigation."
Under cross-examination this witness said:
"I was wearing my police uniform and when
the accused sighted me she began to run."
In his judgment the learned trial Judge
considered the evidence on this issue and held that the defence of insanity was
not established. He rejected it. The
court below affirmed this decision.
The first point to note is that when the
appellant came to the home of PW3, she enquired about the whereabouts of the
parents of the children. PW 2 told her that their father and mother had gone to
the farm. Secondly on hearing that the parents were not home, the appellant
went to a mechanic workshop up the road, picked up an iron rod and returned to
the house. That was when she savagely killed the children. It must be
remembered that in the case of little Amoge, she ran to a neighbour's room and
hid under the bed. The appellant pursued her, dragged her out from under the
bed, took her outside and beat her to death with the iron rod. When she
finished with her, she chased PW 2 who ran to the motor park. It is instructive
that the appellant did not attack any other child or person. She confined her
attack to the children of PW 3. Surely if she ran amok as it has been suggested then she would have
attacked anybody in her way. I am clearly of the view that this was a case of
premeditated murder.
I am strengthened in this view by exhibit B,
the statement of the appellant made on 1/3/88 the day of the incident. It was a
confessional statement. It is coherent. And the events are stated in their
chronological order. It is important to note that the appellant herself provided
the motive for the murders. She stated in exhibit that she killed the children
because their mother (PW 3) used her (the appellant) for juju in order to make
money.
From the evidence before the trial court, it
will be seen clearly that the appellant was not, at the time of the commission
of the offence, in such a state of either mental disease or natural mental
infirmity as to deprive her of the capacity to control her actions: See R. v.
Omoni 12 WACA 511.
The evidence of the state of
mind of the appellant after the killing was manifest in exhibit B. This is a
confessional statement she made to the police after her arrest soon after the
commission of the crime on 1/3/88. Exhibit B is coherent. It sets out the
sequence of events of that fateful day. What is more, the appellant was still
at the scene of crime when PW 4 a policeman arrived. When the appellant saw
him, she ran away. This is evidence that she knew she had done wrong. I have
therefore no doubt in my mind whatsoever that the appellant both understood
what she was doing and knew that she ought not to have done it. In my judgment
the behaviour of the appellant immediately before and immediately after the
killing did not suggest any insanity on her part. The defence of insanity was
rightly rejected by the two courts below. See Madjemu v. The State (2001) 9
NWLR (Pt.718)349.
In the circumstances, this
appeal is dismissed. The conviction and sentence are hereby affirmed.
A. B. WALI, J.S.C.: I have
had the advantage of a preview in draft of the lead judgment just delivered by
my learned brother Katsina-Alu, JSC. I entirely agree with him that the appeal
lacks merit and should be dismissed. Accordingly I too dismiss it. The
conviction and sentence passed on the appellant by the trial court and the
lower court is hereby affirmed.
U. MOHAMMED, J.S.C.: I have
had the advantage of reading the opinion of my learned brother. Katsina-Alu.
JSC in draft and I agree entirely with him that this appeal is without merit.
I also agree that the defence of insanity had
been made up after the appellant was arrested. In the evidence, PW2 told the
trial court that the appellant just asked the children about the whereabout of
their parents and that when she knew that they had both gone to the farm she
looked at both ends of the road and came back and locked the children inside
the house. An old woman who heard the children knocking came and opened the
door. The children came out, as they were eating their food the appellant came
with an iron rod and viciously attacked and killed Peter Ogbuani. Thereafter
she pursued Amoge and reached her inside a house under a bed. She brought her
out and killed her with the iron rod. PW2 began to run. She was pursued by the
appellant towards the motor park. A policeman who gave evidence as PW4 was
attracted to the scene. When the appellant saw him she began to run. She was
later arrested.
This cannot be the behaviour of a person
suffering from mental derangement. In all cases where a plea of insanity is
raised as a defence it is very material to consider the circumstances. Which
have preceded, attended and followed the crime. It is very important to find
out
(1) whether there was preparation for the act,
(2) whether it was done in a manner which
showed a desire for concealment,
(3) whether after the crime the offender
showed consciousness of guilt and made efforts to avoid detection and
(4) whether after arrest the offender offered
false excuses and made false statements.
The appellant prepared for her act when she
asked the children of the whereabout of their parents. She looked at both ends
of the road before she came and locked the children inside the house. After the
crime when she saw a policeman she tried to run away. All these have
established that the appellant was aware of the nature and quality of the act
she was doing. The antecedent and subsequent conduct of the appellant is
relevant to show the state of her mind at the time she committed the offence. I
therefore agree that she was rightly convicted for the murder of the two
children.
For these reasons and fuller reasons in the
judgment of my learned brother, Katsina-Alu, JSC, this appeal has failed. It is
dismissed. I affirm the decisions of the two courts below.
A. I. IGUH, J.S.C.: I have
had the privilege of reading in draft the judgment just delivered by my learned
brother, Katsina-Alu, JSC and I am in full agreement with the reasoning and
conclusion therein reached.
The facts of the case have been fully set out
in the leading judgment and I do not intend to recount them all over again. It
suffices to state that the single issue for determination in this appeal is
whether or not the court below was right in affirming the decision of the trial
court to the effect that the defence of insanity did not avail the appellant.
Section 27 of the Criminal Code Law of the now
defunct Bendel State of Nigeria applicable to Edo State provides that every
person is presumed to be of sound mind, and to have been of sound mind at any
time which comes in question until the contrary is proved. Accordingly, there
is no duty on the prosecution in criminal cases to establish what the law
presumes in its favour, that is to say, the sanity of an accused person. On the
contrary, where an accused person pleads insanity or insane delusion as a
defence to a criminal prosecution, there is a duty and the onus is on him to
rebut this primary presumption of law as to his sanity and to establish his insanity
or insane delusion as the case may be within the context of section 28 of the
criminal code. See Nwoye Onyekwe v. The State (1988) 1 NWLR (Pt.72) 565 SC;
(1988) 2 S.C. (Pt. 2) 369 at 373 - 374, Arisa v. The State (1988) 3 NWLR (Pt.
83) at 388 etc.
The defence of insanity is
provided for in section 28 of the criminal code. For the defence of insanity to
succeed, however, the accused must establish that he was at the time of the
commission of the offence suffering either from "mental disease" or
"natural mental infirmity" and that his condition was such that at
the relevant time, he was deprived of capacity:
(1) to understand what he was doing or
(2) to control his actions or
(3) to know that what he was doing was wrong
or that he ought not to do the act or make the omission for which he stands
trial.
See R. v. Omoni (1949) 12 WACA 511 at 513,
Sanusi v. The State (1984) 10 S.C. 166, Arum v. The State (1979) 11 S.C 91,
Foluso Oladele v. The State (1993) 1 NWLR (Pt. 269) 294 at 307 etc. This burden
on the accused to prove his insanity, however, is merely as in civil cases,
that is to say, on the balance of probability or the preponderance of evidence.
See R. v. William Echem (1952) 14 WACA 158, R. v. Matthew Onakpoya (1959) SCNLR
384; (1959) 4 F.S.C. 150, Emeryl v. The State (1973) 6 S.C. 215 at 216. Although medical evidence is usually of great
assistance in the establishment of insanity, a Judge may none the less make up
his mind on the issue inspite of such expert evidence, taking into
consideration the totality of all the evidence tendered before the court.
However, due weight ordinarily ought to be attached to such medical evidence.
See R. v. Ogor (1961) 1 SCNLR 121; (1961) 1 All NLR 70, Mboho v. The State (1966) 1 All NLR 69,
Benson Madugba v. Queen (1958) SCNLR 17, (1958) 3 FSC 1, Oden Ikpi v. The State
(1976) 12 S.C. 71 etc.
The law is settled that
insanity is primarily a question of fact to be determined by the trial court
which ought to take into consideration each and every admissible piece of
evidence tendered before it, including medical evidence, where available,
together with the whole of the facts and surrounding circumstances of the case,
particularly such vital facts like the nature of the killing, the conduct of
the accused before, at and immediately after the killing and any past history
of mental abnormality of the accused. See Karimu v. The State (1989) 1NWLR (Pt.
96) 140, R. v. Inyang 12 WACA 5 at 7, James Anyim v. The State (1983) 1 SC NLR
370 at 377 etc.
Now, the learned trial Judge meticulously
considered every bit of evidence led before the court at the trial together
with the medical evidence tendered in respect of which she did not hesitate to
attach due weight and came to the conclusion that the appellant had failed to
establish the defence of insanity set up by her. Said she:
"Upon a consideration of the whole of the
evidence and the behaviour of the accused person soon after the offence was
committed and the outstanding peculiarity of the behaviour pattern of the
accused in that she remembered what she did after the event and why she did it,
I hold that the evidence of the prosecution witnesses was not indicative of
insanity on the part of the accused person - in a word, there is nothing in the
case for the defence for me to arrive at the conclusion that as at the period
of committing the offence it is most probable that accused person was insane
within the meaning of section 28 of the criminal code."
The above finding of the learned trial Judge
is amply supported by abundant evidence on record which the trial court
accepted as established. These include the fact that the appellant before she
struck at the scene of crime carefully ensured that both parents of the
deceased and the other adult inmates of the premises were not around and that
it was safe for her to attack and kill them. The appellant was therefore fully
aware that what she planned and executed was wrong and that she ought not to do
the act for which she stood trial.
In this regard. PW2 testified as follows:
"I know the accused person. On 1st day of
March, 1988 my father Mr. Ogbuani went to the farm so also was my mother. On
the same day the accused came to our house and asked for my father and I told
her that my father had gone to the farm, so also was my mother. Thereafter the
accused went to the main road and looked at both ends of the road to ascertain
if any person was coming. During this period every person and our neighbours
had gone to the farm leaving only small children at home. After accused had
ascertained that no body was coming to our house, she went to a mechanic shed
and accused picked up a piece of iron rod . The accused came to us, pushed the
deceased Peter Ogbuani down and used the piece of iron rod she was holding to
hit him on the head several times. The deceased cried as he was being hit on
the head by the accused, and told Amoge Ogbuani to run but the accused person
after killing Peter pursued Amoge as she was running she entered another
person's house and entered under the bed of another woman when accused entered
the latter woman's house as she was pursuing Amoge, the woman showed Amoge to
the accused who dragged Amoge out from under the bed and used the piece of iron
she was holding to kill the deceased Amoge in the woman's house."
PW3 also testified thus:-
" I have known the accused person for
about three years. I have never known the accused person as being insane."
PW6, Julius Ahie, a deputy superintendent of
police, to whom the appellant was taken on the same date of the incident for the
confirmation of her confessional statement to the police stated:-
"It is correct that when the accused was
brought before me, she was normal and gave rational answers to questions I put
to her."
There is also the evidence that after killing
the deceased persons, the appellant ran away when she saw a policeman in
uniform around. This evidence which was accepted by the trial court clearly
gives further support to the fact that the appellant knew that what she did was
wrong and that she should not do the act for which she was tried. In this
regard, PW4, the investigating police officer testified thus:-
"On the strength of this information I
ran to the scene with 2nd PW and on getting to the residence of 2nd PW I met
the accused person holding an iron rod in her hand, and there was a small girl
lying on the ground. She was dead. Immediately the accused saw me she began to
run away, I pursued the accused and arrested the accused person with the iron
rod. I later took the accused to the Esigie police station for
investigation."
Under cross-examination, PW4 explained:-
"I was wearing my police uniform and when
the accused sighted me she began to run."
The rejection by the learned trial Judge of
the appellant's defence of insanity was also given very exhaustive
consideration and affirmed by the Court of Appeal. Said the Court of Appeal:-
"The learned trial Judge meticulously
considered the evidence led and in particular the defence of insanity and he
correctly, in my view, rejected the defence. I too, think the defence was made
up."
I have myself carefully given adequate
consideration to all the evidence led in this case with the findings of the
trial court thereupon as affirmed by the court below and can find no reason to
interfere with the decision of both courts in the matter.
It is for the above and the more detailed
reasons contained in the judgment of my learned brother, Katsina-Alu, JSC, that
I, too, find no substance in this appeal which must be and is hereby dismissed
by me. The conviction and sentence of the appellant by the trial court as
confirmed by the court below is hereby further affirmed.
E. O. AYOOLA, J.S.C.: I have
had the privilege of reading in advance the judgment just delivered by my
learned brother, Katsina-Alu, JSC. I agree that this appeal should be dismissed
for the reasons he gives. Appeal dismissed.
Appearances
Pat Onegbedan, Esq.
For Appellant
AND
Richard Otaigbe Irenlen, Esq.
For Respondent
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