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CaseLaw

Laoye V. State (1985) CLR 10(e) (SC)

Judgement delivered on October 25th 1985

Brief

  • Defences
  • Burden of proof in criminal matters
  • Self defence

Facts

This is indeed a most tragic case. The deceased, Stephen Afere, appellant and 1st prosecution witness, Akintokunde Akindahunsi were all students of the University of Ife, IIe-Ife. They were also friends. On the 15th March, 1982 at about 6.30p.m. the appellant and the deceased, Stephen Afere, went to a house at Ondo Road, Modakeke to collect a book from one Alaba. Incidentally, Alaba lived in the same house as the 1st prosecution witness. As Alaba was not in, and as the book could not be found, the 3 of them i.e. appellant, deceased and Akindahunsi walked back to the campus of the University.

According to the first prosecution witness, he walked slightly ahead of the other two. Then at a point he realised that they were having an argument. When he turned back the two of them were having a scuffle. He moved nearer and found that the argument was over a girl-friend. As he appealed to their sense of reason, the appellant stabbed him on the palm. He bled badly and had to leave for the University junction. As he ran, he heard shouts from the direction of both of them, particularly shouts of pain from the deceased.

From this incident, the deceased Stephen Afere died and the appellant, Adeyinka Laoye, was arraigned before Apara, J. at the Ile Ife High Court charged with his murder. 8 witnesses testified for the prosecution while the appellant testified in his own defence and called no witness. On 22nd August, 1983 judgment was delivered and the appellant was found guilty of manslaughter and sentenced to 5 years imprisonment. It is pertinent at this stage to refer to the reasoning on which the learned trial judge finally arrived at his conclusion. He said –

"What happened from this stage on is of paramount importance. The accused admitted in court that he had a bigger stature physically than the deceased. The accused also admitted in court that he knew some karate. With this combination, if he brought out his own knife one could understand the situation if the accused had just stabbed the deceased's shoulder once only and combined it with his karate knowledge to disarm the deceased. The accused did not do this. According to the Doctor who performed the post mortem examination on the deceased, the deceased had five serious stab wounds which caused his death. As it was only the accused and the deceased who fought with knives, the only irresistible conclusion I have drawn is that it was the accused who inflicted the five serious wounds on the deceased, and it was these wounds that killed the deceased. My conclusion here is that the defence offered by the accused was far in excess of the attack offered by the deceased. The long and short of this is that this incident started as a quarrel between the accused and the deceased and eventually resulted in a fight in which the accused used his knife freely our of proportion to the attack offered by the deceased. I say this because the accused had just one slight wound on his leg to show for the combat. No time intervened between the quarrel and the fight between the two of them. Therefore passions had not cooled off (Italics mine)

The appellant appealed to the Court of Appeal which in a majority judgment (Kutigi and Babalakin, J.J.C.A., with Ogundare, J.C.A. dissenting) delivered on 28th June, 1984 dismissed his appeal and affirmed the conviction and sentence passed on him by the High Court. The appellant has now appealed to this Court.

Issues

  • Whether on the evidence which the trial Court accepted the defence of self...
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