High Court of Tanzania

This is the second level in the Judiciary justice delivery hierarchy. It has both appellate and original powers on civil and criminal matters. It also hears appeals from the Courts of Resident Magistrate, the District Courts, and the District Land and Housing Tribunals in exercise of their original, appellate and/or revisional jurisdiction. The High Court is divided into Zones and specialized Divisions. 

Physical address
24 Kivukoni Road, P O Box: S.L.P. 9004
618 judgments

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618 judgments
Citation
Judgment date
April 1990
Circumstantial possession evidence and colour-based identification insufficient to prove theft beyond reasonable doubt; conviction quashed.
Criminal law – Theft – Circumstantial evidence – Whether proven facts irresistibly point to accused as perpetrator – proof beyond reasonable doubt required. Evidence – Identification of remains by owner’s description (colour) – reliability and sufficiency. Criminal procedure – Conviction unsafe where reasonable alternative explanations exist; appeal allowed and conviction quashed.
30 April 1990
A court lacking jurisdiction to hear an adultery damages claim renders the proceedings null; suit must be instituted in the appropriate court.
Jurisdiction – Law of Marriage Act s.75 – Suit for damages for adultery – Primary/District Court jurisdiction limited by form of marriage – Proceedings in a court lacking jurisdiction are nullities.
30 April 1990
A court may forfeit a surety’s recognisance for the accused’s default but may reduce the amount for mitigating circumstances.
Criminal procedure – Recognisance/surety – Liability for accused’s non-appearance – Court’s discretion to forfeit recognisance immediately – Mitigating circumstances may justify reduction of forfeiture amount.
27 April 1990
Reported
Claimant failed to prove malice or lack of reasonable and probable cause in malicious prosecution claim; appeal dismissed.
Malicious prosecution; reasonable and probable cause; prosecutor need not test every possible fact; malice and want of probable cause must be proved by plaintiff.
25 April 1990
Missing postal funds established beyond reasonable doubt; postmaster credible and appellant’s explanation rejected, appeal dismissed.
Criminal law – theft/misappropriation of public/postal funds – evidential sufficiency of account books and postmaster’s testimony – credibility of accused’s explanation – appeal dismissed.
25 April 1990
Appeal dismissed: lawful search, possession of hospital drugs and equipment proved, sentence upheld.
Criminal law – unlawful possession of hospital/medical drugs and equipment – search and seizure – validity of search order – accused’s obligation to account for possession – allegation of planting by police – appellate review of trial court’s factual findings.
24 April 1990
Primary Courts lack jurisdiction over tort/negligence claims not founded on customary law; appeal allowed with costs.
Civil procedure – Jurisdiction of Primary Courts – Section 18(1)(a) Primary Courts Act – Primary Court may only hear civil matters where customary law is applicable; Tort – negligence claims not properly before Primary Court absent a showing that customary law applies; Requirement that lower courts ascertain applicable law before assuming jurisdiction.
24 April 1990
High Court quashed summary dismissal under section 226(1), holding dismissal for non-appearance should be sparing and adjournments preferred.
Criminal procedure – section 226(1) CPA – dismissal for non-appearance of complainant; municipal officer as complainant’s representative; discretionary power to dismiss must be exercised sparingly; adjournment preferred to avoid failure of justice.
24 April 1990
Conviction based on unsatisfactory identification of stolen property is unsafe and acquittal must be upheld.
Criminal law – Theft – Identification of stolen property – Insufficiency of identification of a single item to support conviction for multiple stolen items – Burden to prove ownership and absence of reasonable doubt.
23 April 1990
Malicious-damage conviction unsafe where damage by cattle resulted from negligence rather than proved willful, unlawful conduct.
Criminal law – Malicious damage to property – Essential elements: willfulness and unlawfulness – Evidence of negligence or lack of control of animals does not establish malice – Conviction unsafe where intent to damage not proved.
23 April 1990
District Court lacked jurisdiction over reclassified economic offence; conviction quashed and accused released.
Criminal law – jurisdiction – reclassification of offence as economic offence by Written Laws (Misc. Amendment) Act No.10/1989 – such offences triable by Economic Crimes Court unless jurisdiction conferred under s.12(3) of Economic and Organised Crime Control Act No.13/1984. Criminal procedure – certificate of jurisdiction – absence of DPP/State Attorney certificate renders subsequent District Court trial ultravires. Proceedings – trial without jurisdiction is a nullity; conviction quashed and sentence set aside; accused entitled to immediate release unless lawfully held for proper court.
23 April 1990
Trial court must invite accused to show cause against driving disqualification and record special reasons for below-minimum sentences.
Road Traffic Act — Reckless driving — Mandatory disqualification under s.27(1)(a) — Accused must be invited to show cause — Minimum penalties under s.63(2) — Court must elicit and record special reasons for sentences below statutory minima — Revisionary remedy to remit file to cure procedural omissions.
23 April 1990
Court reduced an excessive advocate's fee, struck duplicative instruction items, and taxed the bill at shs. 42,185/=.
Costs — Taxation of bill of costs — Excessive advocate fees — Whether instruction fees duplicative — Items 6–10 struck out — Item No.1 reduced to shs. 40,000/= — Total taxed at shs. 42,185/=.
21 April 1990
Convictions for housebreaking and stealing upheld; statutory minimum five-year sentence imposed due to value of stolen property.
Criminal law – housebreaking and stealing – conviction supported by circumstantial evidence and recent possession. Recent possession – what constitutes "recent" depends on property nature and circumstances; offering goods for sale strengthens inference of guilt. Evidence – rejection of accused's explanation may sustain conviction where it fails to raise reasonable doubt. Sentencing – Minimum Sentences Act s.5(d) – statutory minimum applied where value threshold met; illegal lower sentence set aside and statutory five-year term imposed.
20 April 1990
A magistrate’s discretionary refusal to permit a private person to conduct a prosecution will not be disturbed absent improper exercise of that discretion.
Criminal procedure – section 99(1) – permission for private person to conduct prosecution – discretionary power of magistrate – requirement to exercise discretion judicially – limited scope for appellate interference where discretion properly exercised.
20 April 1990
Conviction quashed where identification and prosecution evidence were unreliable and did not prove guilt beyond reasonable doubt.
Criminal law — Identification evidence — Sufficiency and reliability of witness identification — Proof beyond reasonable doubt — Unsafe conviction where alleged victim gave no or unclear evidence and prosecution case was weak.
20 April 1990
Conviction for cattle theft quashed where circumstantial evidence did not prove the appellant’s guilt beyond reasonable doubt.
Criminal law – cattle theft – circumstantial evidence – requirement that circumstantial facts must point irresistibly to accused – possession inference – appellate review where trial record unclear – conviction quashed for failure to prove guilt beyond reasonable doubt.
20 April 1990
Appellant's challenge to respondent's one‑acre inheritance share dismissed; further appeal requires leave and certification.
Inheritance dispute — allocation of ancestral land — Primary Court's factual findings on entitlement and possession — District Court and High Court decline to interfere — appeal dismissed for lack of merit.
19 April 1990
Appellant who financed the house proved ownership; lower court erred by imposing a beyond‑reasonable‑doubt standard in civil case.
Family/property — ownership dispute between brothers over house allegedly purchased and built with money remitted by one brother. Evidence — parents' testimony as corroboration; sufficiency of proof on a balance of probabilities. Civil standard of proof — misapplication of beyond-reasonable-doubt standard by trial court is erroneous. Relief — equitable recognition of ownership and order for registration; reversal of sale-and-split order.
19 April 1990
Convictions based only on a co-accused’s confession, without independent corroboration, are unsafe and liable to be quashed.
Criminal law – convictions based solely on confession by co-accused – section 33(2) safeguards – necessity for independent corroborative evidence – failure by trial court to consider statutory caution renders conviction unsafe.
18 April 1990
17 April 1990
Reported
Statutory right of occupancy after survey prevails over prior customary occupation; squatters only receive compensation for improvements.
Land law – statutory right of occupancy v customary/native occupation – where area surveyed and plots granted statutory grant confers superior title; customary occupation may attract compensation for unexhausted improvements but not superior title in urban/planning areas; failure to apply for statutory rights leads to loss of priority.
15 April 1990
Applicant failed to prove an alleged oral grant of leave to appeal and did not show sufficient cause for extension of time.
Civil procedure – Extension of time – Application for leave to appeal – Allegation of oral/informal application and grant on date of judgment – Requirement of record/evidence to prove such application – No credible evidence, application refused. Appeal procedure – Leave to appeal must be sought within prescribed time; failure to show sufficient cause for delay disentitles applicant to extension or leave.
12 April 1990
Ex parte order properly set aside where respondents were not served; possession dispute to continue in Housing Tribunal, applicant’s stay application dismissed.
Civil procedure – ex parte orders – setting aside ex parte orders where respondents not served – discretion to set aside to avoid injustice; Possession disputes – proper forum – Housing Tribunal jurisdiction.
12 April 1990
Whether a water-point owner who withholds access for nonpayment is liable for cattle lost thereafter.
Primary Court jurisdiction — Characterisation of dispute as customary matter versus general-law tort; Denial of water access for unpaid fee — liability for subsequent loss of cattle; Appeal — correctness of District Court reversing Primary Court.
12 April 1990
Appellate court reduced robbery sentences to statutory maximum, finding the Senior Resident Magistrate exceeded sentencing powers.
Criminal law – robbery – sentencing limits of subordinate courts – interpretation of section 170(1)(a) and proviso to section 170(2) – proviso exempts confirmation requirement but does not confer unlimited sentencing power – dependants not automatically mitigating – appellate reduction of excessive sentence.
11 April 1990
Reported
Dependants do not justify excessive sentence; Senior Resident Magistrate’s power limited by section 170(1)(a) to eight years.
Criminal law – Sentencing – limits on subordinate court sentencing powers under section 170(1)(a) – proviso in section 170(2) pertains to confirmation, not to substantive sentencing limits – dependants not per se mitigating.
11 April 1990
Assault convictions upheld; three-year sentences reduced to six months each due to minor injuries shown on PF.3.
Criminal law – Assault – Appeal against conviction – Conviction upheld where assault occurred in broad daylight before many witnesses. Sentencing – Excessive sentence – Appellate court may reduce sentence where injuries are minor as shown by medical report (PF.3). Criminal appeals – Conviction and sentence reviewed separately; factual findings on guilt respected but sentence altered for proportionality.
11 April 1990
Appeal dismissed: night watchman’s sleeping defence rejected; possession and co-accused’s statement supported burglary and stealing convictions.
Criminal law – Burglary (s.294(1) Penal Code) and stealing (s.265 Penal Code) – Conviction based on circumstantial evidence and possession by co-accused. Evidence – Duty of night watchman; sleeping on duty inconsistent with guard role; quantity and nature of goods as supporting inference of guilt. Possession by third party – acts and statements of co-accused as evidential link to appellant.
11 April 1990
A bona fide claim of right to property defeated a theft conviction; conviction and sentence were quashed and appellant released.
Criminal law – Theft by agent (s.273 Penal Code) – Elements of dishonest appropriation – bona fide claim of right as a defence to property offences. Criminal procedure – Appeal – Setting aside conviction where prosecution does not support conviction in face of credible defence.
11 April 1990
11 April 1990
Conviction under Immigration Act upheld; regional permission not a legal defence; sentence and wind‑up order set aside for unconditional discharge.
Immigration law – offences under s.26(1) – defective charge curable under s.388 Criminal Procedure Act – regional administrative permission not a legal variation of permit – sentencing limits under s.26(2) – courts lack power to order winding up of business as criminal sentence.
11 April 1990
Reported
Lack of jurisdiction by the presiding magistrate in a Resident Magistrate’s Court is a fatal, incurable defect; leave to appeal denied.
Constitutional and statutory limits on judicial jurisdiction – Magistrates’ Courts – composition of a Resident Magistrate’s Court – requirement that it be presided by a Resident Magistrate. Jurisdictional defects – lack of jurisdiction in presiding magistrate – fatal and incurable defect rendering proceedings a nullity. Appealability – leave to appeal to Court of Appeal requires a fit point of law.
10 April 1990
Appeal against conviction dismissed; five‑year sentence for receiving stolen property reduced to three years.
Criminal law – Receiving stolen property – Sufficiency of evidence – corroboration by accused's conduct (escape) of co-accused’s testimony. Criminal procedure – Appeal competence – delay where judgment delivered in accused’s absence. Sentencing – Minimum Sentences Act – effect of ‘specified authority’ and property value on appropriate sentence.
10 April 1990
Cancellation of bail without sworn evidence or prosecution application is improper; bail restored on original terms.
Criminal procedure — Bail — Cancellation of bail — Magistrate may not revoke bail on fears, suspicions or charge-sheet allegations alone — Objections to bail should be supported by evidence or affidavit unless undue delay would result — Presumption of innocence — Remand requires cogent disclosed reasons.
9 April 1990
A customary will that fails required formalities is invalid; documentary evidence may establish the deceased’s identity and rightful administrator.
Probate – validity of customary will – compliance with Customary Law Declaration, 1963 (Rules 3, 19, 22, 25). Evidence – admissibility and weight of documentary proof to establish deceased’s identity and kinship. Succession – determination of rightful heir/administrator where purported will is invalid.
6 April 1990
A valid paternal gift and possession under customary law entitled the appellant to the land; appellate reversal was wrongful.
Land law – customary grants to women – validity of a paternal gift witnessed in 1959 – possession and estoppel; appellate interference with primary findings.
6 April 1990
Accused found not guilty by reason of insanity and ordered detained as a criminal lunatic; proceedings sent to Minister.
Criminal law – Insanity plea – Assessment of accused’s mental state at time of offence – Weight of conflicting medical reports and assessors’ opinions – Finding not guilty by reason of insanity and detention as criminal lunatic; committal to Minister.
3 April 1990
Appeal allowed: family occupation proved ownership; respondent’s uncorroborated purchase claim failed to rebut that evidence.
Land dispute – ownership of family shamba – evidence of occupation and clearing by deceased relative; possession as proof of ownership. Evidence – burden and proof – uncorroborated claim of purchase insufficient where alleged seller not called. Civil appeals – appellate interference – appellate court must have basis to reverse a lower court’s unanimous factual finding.
2 April 1990
March 1990
High Court set aside ex parte magistrate’s judgment to resolve conflict between customary title claim and statutory right of occupancy.
Civil procedure – ex parte judgment – setting aside an ex parte magistrate’s judgment where record discloses competing claims; inherent powers under section 95 Civil Procedure Code to prevent abuse of process and secure ends of justice. Land law – conflict between customary title and statutory right of occupancy – necessity to determine competing title evidence rather than allow ex parte determination.
30 March 1990
Forgery not proved for lack of signature evidence; uttering and obtaining by false pretences upheld and restitution ordered.
Criminal law – Forgery – requirement to prove authorship/signature – absence of handwriting evidence defeats forgery charge; Uttering false document – presenting dishonoured bankers’ cheque as genuine to obtain goods; Obtaining by false pretences – representation by false cheque procures property; Criminal procedure – trial in absentia – proper where accused defaults and no communication; Restitution – proceeds/value of recovered stolen goods to be restored to owner.
30 March 1990
Appellate court quashed one appellant’s robbery conviction for insufficient evidence and substituted a receiving conviction for the other.
Criminal law – robbery and receiving – possession of stolen property – sufficiency of evidence for conviction – substitution of conviction to receiving under s.311(1) Penal Code – release for insufficient evidence.
30 March 1990
Plaintiffs proved title by historical allocation list and sketch map; injunction, special damages, costs and interest awarded against the defendant.
Land law – title and allocation – weight of historical allocation lists and divisional records in proving ownership; Trespass and encroachment – entitlement to injunction and damages where plaintiff deprived of use; Evidence – probative value of contemporaneous allocation list and sketch map over later contradictory village testimony; Costs and interest – award of special damages, taxed costs and interest on decretal amount.
30 March 1990
Conviction quashed where witness contradictions and inadequate armoury custody records created reasonable doubt.
Criminal law – proof beyond reasonable doubt – contradictions between prosecution witnesses – chain of custody and armoury control systems – possession and stealing by servant.
29 March 1990
28 March 1990
Confession to a constable inadmissible and last‑seen/circumstantial evidence insufficient; all accused acquitted.
Evidence — Confession — Admissibility of confession made before a police constable — Evidence Act s.27 and definition of 'police officer'. Evidence — Confession of co‑accused — Not sole basis for conviction — Evidence Act s.33(2). Criminal law — Circumstantial evidence and 'last seen' evidence — Must exclude other reasonable hypotheses to sustain conviction. Criminal procedure — Burden of proof — Prosecution must prove guilt beyond reasonable doubt.
28 March 1990
Possession and sale of recently stolen goods justified upholding the appellant’s burglary/theft conviction.
Criminal law – Burglary/theft – Forced entry and theft of goods – Recovery of stolen goods in accused’s possession shortly after theft and admission/sale to a purchaser supports conviction.
28 March 1990
Appellant's cattle-theft conviction upheld: credible eyewitness ID and recent possession sustained the conviction.
Criminal law – cattle theft – eyewitness identification – direct testimony at close range in daylight – corroboration not required. Criminal law – recent possession – possession three days after theft supports inference of guilt. Criminal procedure – alibi – compliance with s.194 Criminal Procedure Act required; noncompliance undermines alibi. Appeal – appellate deference to trial court credibility findings.
27 March 1990
27 March 1990
The appellant failed to prove the disputed land was clan land or a clan appointment; appeal dismissed with costs.
Land law – proof of clan land – burden of proof on claimant to establish land is clan land and any clan appointment. Evidence – weight of assessors’ majority verdict when not unanimous and lacking explanation – dissenting magistrate’s reasoning may prevail. Succession/ownership – finding that disputed land belonged to deceased and respondents were lawful heirs supported by evidence.
27 March 1990