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
899 judgments

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899 judgments
Citation
Judgment date
December 2006
Temporary attachment of bank accounts refused where applicant failed to identify accounts or prove risk of dissipation.
Civil procedure – Interlocutory relief – Order 37 CPR – Application for temporary attachment and restraint of bank accounts pending appeal – Applicant must provide specific account particulars and evidence of funds and risk of dissipation – Failure to establish absence of other assets or concrete risk grounds refusal.
21 December 2006
Adjournment sine die of a civil suit pending a related criminal case was set aside due to undue delay and lack of justification.
Civil procedure – adjournment sine die – effect of related criminal proceedings on civil claims – improper indefinite stay where applicant not accused and prosecution delayed; interest of justice requires timely determination of civil rights.
21 December 2006
Limited injunction restraining receivers from taking possession pending trial, finding triable issues and irreparable harm.
Civil procedure — Interim injunction — test: serious triable issue, irreparable harm, balance of convenience — Receivership — limited restraint on taking possession of charged assets pending trial — Procedural objections (forum selection, governing law, verification, alleged conflict of interest) raised too late or not determinative on papers.
20 December 2006
Failure to prove village allocation and insufficient evidence led to dismissal of land-ownership claim with costs.
Land dispute – proof of allocation by village authorities – burden of proof – sufficiency of testimony of casual labourers – effect of permitting occupant to build house on ownership/possession – appellate affirmation of failure to prove title.
20 December 2006
Applicant failed to show sufficient cause for delay in obtaining certified copies; extension refused and appeal dismissed with costs.
Civil procedure — extension of time — sufficient cause — burden of proof on applicant to show unavailability of certified copies — credibility of Exchequer/ERV receipt — refusal of extension and dismissal with costs.
19 December 2006
A defective jurat invalidates an affidavit but does not automatically justify ex parte proceedings; amendment should be allowed.
* Civil procedure – affidavits – defective jurat – competency of affidavit and effect of defective jurat * Civil procedure – striking defective affidavits vs. proceeding ex parte – court discretion to allow amendment * Labour/administrative law – enforcement of Labour Conciliatory Board decisions – jurisdictional questions under Security of Employment Act * Procedural fairness – remedy to allow hearing on merits where affidavit defect is curable
19 December 2006
Applicant convicted of rape seeks enlargement of time to lodge notice and petition of appeal; ruling outcome not contained in record.
Criminal procedure – enlargement of time to lodge a notice of appeal and to file a petition of appeal – application under Criminal Procedure Act 1985 – convicted accused seeking extension after expiry of appeal time limits.
18 December 2006
An after‑deadline application to depart a scheduling conference order is time‑barred; scheduling orders are directory but strictly enforced.
* Civil procedure – Scheduling conference orders (Order VIII A r.4 CPC) – directory not mandatory but to be strictly construed; parties must seek departure/amendment before expiry. * Section 93 CPC – enlargement of time – limited where scheduling orders (Order VIII A) and s.80 give such orders statutory force. * Failure to apply before scheduling deadline renders subsequent application time‑barred.
18 December 2006
A scheduling conference order (speed track) is directory but strictly enforced; late departure applications are time-barred without prior extension.
Civil procedure – Order VIIIA r.4 scheduling conference orders (speed tracks) – directory but strictly construed; scheduling orders have force of law and limit court’s discretion under s.93; parties must seek departure/extension before expiry or first apply for extension of time to seek departure.
18 December 2006
Appellant had locus standi; seller lacked capacity to dispose clan land and District Court wrongly reversed Primary Court.
* Customary/clan land – disposal of clan land – capacity to sell or lease – requirement of consultation and consent of clan members and village government involvement. * Applicability of GN. 436 of 1963 – distinction between inheritance proceedings and recovery of possession. * Locus standi – clan member with usufructuary interest has standing to challenge illegal disposition of clan land. * Non-joinder – failure to join seller not necessarily fatal where seller gives evidence; defect curable and weight of evidence determinative.
15 December 2006
A housing tribunal lacks jurisdiction to hear eviction brought by a tenant against a trespasser arising from competing leases.
* Housing law – Jurisdiction – Whether housing tribunals may entertain eviction applications where disputing parties are not in a landlord‑tenant relationship – tribunal ousted where applicant is tenant and opponent a trespasser. * Property/contract – Competing leases – a subsequent lease granted by landlord after an earlier subsisting lease is void as against the earlier lessee. * Civil procedure – Jurisdictional objections – may be raised on appeal or by the court suo motu.
15 December 2006
Whether a housing tribunal has jurisdiction to determine an eviction between a lawful tenant and a trespasser, and whether jurisdiction can be raised on appeal.
* Housing law – jurisdiction – scope of Regional Housing Tribunal’s jurisdiction restricted to landlord–tenant disputes – eviction between tenant and trespasser falls outside jurisdiction. * Civil procedure – jurisdiction may be raised on appeal and court may raise jurisdiction sua sponte; lack of jurisdiction renders proceedings a nullity. * Property/tenancy – validity of subsequent lease when an earlier subsisting lease exists – subsequent lease void.
15 December 2006
Jurisdictional issues can be raised on appeal; tribunal lacked jurisdiction where dispute was between tenant and trespasser, rendering proceedings void.
Administrative/jurisdictional law – Housing tribunals – Jurisdictional issues may be raised on appeal or suo motu; absence of landlord as party where dispute is tenant versus trespasser ousts tribunal’s jurisdiction – Validity of competing leases with public landlord (NHC).
15 December 2006
Conviction for possession of narcotics quashed where lone police testimony lacked scientific identification and corroboration.
Criminal law – narcotic drugs – possession – admissibility and sufficiency of identification evidence – requirement for cogent/professional proof and calling of available witnesses; unsafe conviction quashed.
14 December 2006
Conviction for possession of narcotics quashed where prosecution failed to prove substance identity or call corroborative witnesses.
Narcotic drugs – proof of identity of seized substance – necessity of scientific or expert evidence where identification by single police witness is unsubstantiated; failure to call expected witnesses undermines prosecution case; convictions for serious drug offences require cogent evidence.
14 December 2006
An applicant asserting a legal interest in matrimonial property has locus standi; factual disputes cannot be decided on submissions.
* Civil procedure – preliminary objection – refusal to determine triable facts at PO stage; submissions are not evidence. * Locus standi – spouse’s legal interest in matrimonial property – pleadings may suffice to confer locus standi. * Property law – matrimonial house alleged to be jointly acquired – disputes about title registration and caveat require evidence on merits.
14 December 2006
Court overruled jurisdictional objection, finding the claim tortious and within this High Court's jurisdiction.
Jurisdiction – Land Disputes Courts Act (Cap. 216 R.E. 2002) – distinction between land title disputes and tortious claims incidental to possession; preliminary objection; temporary injunction; Chief Justice's extension of jurisdiction under s.54(4).
14 December 2006
The appellant's possession conviction upheld but theft conviction quashed as duplicative.
Criminal law – Possession of stolen property – identification of exhibits (bicycle frame number; pump serial number) – eyewitness identification and flight; Criminal law – Theft – insufficiency of evidence where there is no proof of breaking or actual theft; Conviction duplicity – conviction for possession cannot support a separate stealing conviction on same facts.
14 December 2006
A possession conviction was upheld, but a concurrent stealing conviction based on the same facts was quashed for impermissible duplication.
* Criminal law – Possession of stolen property – identification by owner (frame/serial numbers and receipts) – sufficiency of evidence to convict. * Criminal procedure – Duplicity of convictions – impermissibility of convicting for stealing and for possession of the same stolen items on the same facts.
14 December 2006
The appellant who inspected and accepted a used vehicle cannot later claim defects; appeal dismissed.
Sale of Goods Act (s.16, s.37) — implied condition and fitness for purpose — buyer's examination — deemed acceptance of goods — caveat emptor — sale of used vehicle — rejection time limits.
14 December 2006
Marital relationship does not convert spouses into same party for res judicata; Primary Court wrongly dismissed respondent's land suit.
Res judicata – identity of parties and privity; Primary Courts – applicability of Civil Procedure Code explanations; Revisional jurisdiction – suo motu revision and audi alteram partem (s.22(3) Magistrates' Courts Act) – decision may be based on record where no detriment results.
14 December 2006
An application to depart from a scheduling order is time‑barred if not brought within the applicable limitation period and is incompetent.
Civil procedure – Order VIII A (scheduling conference) – departure from scheduling order; Limitation – Law of Limitation Act, item 21 Part III – 60 days; Competence – applications to depart time‑barred if not brought within limitation or preceded by extension of time; Functus officio – striking out does not permanently bar refiling once defects remedied.
14 December 2006
An appellate court should not overturn trial court credibility findings; heir found to own disputed land, not merely hold usufruct.
Land law – ownership v. clan land – succession – assessment of witnesses’ credibility by trial court – appellate interference with factual findings; usufructuary rights v. ownership.
12 December 2006
12 December 2006
12 December 2006
Jurisdictional objections may be raised on appeal; District Court lacked pecuniary jurisdiction over this commercial insurance claim exceeding Tshs.30,000,000.
* Civil procedure – jurisdiction – point of jurisdiction may be raised at any stage, including on appeal. * Statutory construction – Magistrates Courts Act amendments (2004) – definition of 'commercial case' and pecuniary limit for District Courts (Tshs. 30,000,000). * Commercial law – insurance indemnity suits characterized as commercial matters for jurisdictional purposes. * Claims with uncertain future amounts (daily hire) cannot be aggregated to determine pecuniary jurisdiction when value is indeterminate.
12 December 2006
A defective jurat on a counter‑affidavit does not justify an ex parte hearing; the court should allow an amended affidavit and decide on the merits.
Labour law – enforcement of Labour Conciliatory Board decisions – stay of execution – jurisdiction of ordinary courts under the Security of Employment Act; Civil Procedure – defective jurat on affidavit – remedy is striking out and allowing amended affidavit, not automatic ex parte hearing; discretionary relief – interest of justice.
11 December 2006
Conviction for incest based on child’s voice identification corroborated by medical and circumstantial evidence; sentenced to 30 years.
* Criminal law – Sexual offence (incest) – Identification by voice of a child of tender years – admissibility and reliability. * Evidence – Single witness identification – need for corroboration in sexual offences and use of circumstantial evidence. * Evidence – Medical (PF3) confirmation of sexual assault as proof of intercourse. * Sentencing – Judicial interpretation of legislative gap regarding offences against children under ten and burden of proof of victim’s age.
11 December 2006
Open-door entry cannot sustain housebreaking; the act was attempted theft and malicious damage conviction upheld.
* Criminal law – housebreaking – entry through an open door does not constitute "breaking" for housebreaking offences. * Criminal law – theft v. attempted theft – arrest before removal of property amounts to attempted theft. * Sentencing – Minimum Sentence Act – offences removed from the Act by 2002 amendment cannot be sentenced under section 5. * Malicious damage – conviction supported where accused deliberately damaged complainant’s property.
8 December 2006
Application for next-friend appointment dismissed where applicant’s affidavit was tainted by untruths and lacked material disclosure.
* Civil procedure – Order 31 CPC – Inquiry into mental capacity and appointment of next friend – sufficiency and truthfulness of affidavits. * Affidavits tainted with untruths – an affidavit containing falsehoods or omitting material facts cannot support an application. * Medical reports – expert opinions not binding on the court. * Documentary and conduct evidence (passport stamps, driving licence, self-representation in other suit) can rebut claims of incapacity.
8 December 2006
A court cannot extend an expired temporary injunction or exceed the statutory one-year aggregate limit.
* Civil procedure – interim (temporary) injunction – extension of time – whether a court can extend an injunction after it has expired – Order XXXVII, Rule 3 proviso (aggregate one-year limit). * Civil procedure – ex parte interim injunction – procedural challenge to ex parte order – appropriate remedies (preliminary objection or counter-affidavit).
8 December 2006
Proceedings conducted after a case's life-span expired without court extension are nullities; an extension application is required to continue.
Civil procedure – Case track system (Order VIIIA r.4 CPC) – Case life-span expiry – Extension of time – Jurisdictional effect of proceedings after expiry – Nullity of post-expiry proceedings.
8 December 2006
Expiry of a case life‑span renders subsequent proceedings null unless a party obtains a court extension.
Civil procedure – case management and case life‑span (speed track) – Order VIII A r.4 CPC – effect of expiry of prescribed case life‑span; validity of proceedings after expiry; duty to apply for extension of time; proceedings after expiry are nullity absent extension order.
8 December 2006
A district court "ruling" that conclusively decides parties' rights is a decree and therefore appealable.
* Civil Procedure – Decree – whether a decision headed "Ruling" can be a decree under s.3 CPC. * Appealability – rulings on no-case-to-answer that finally determine parties' rights are appealable. * Construction – substance of a decision prevails over its label when determining appealability.
7 December 2006
District Court may quash Primary Court proceedings without hearing, but quashing must be justified; RM's res judicata dismissal was erroneous.
Magistrates' Courts Act — District Court revision of Primary Court proceedings; Section 22(1) and (3) — power to call records and quash proceedings without hearing; res judicata — improper dismissal where matter transferred; quashing and restoration of RM's case; revisional jurisdiction limits and proper grounds for quashing.
7 December 2006
Proceedings by a purported administrator before obtaining letters of administration are void and cannot be validated later.
Administration of estates – locus to sue – a person suing as administrator before grant of letters has no locus; such proceedings are void and cannot be validated later – Fifth Schedule to the Magistrates' Courts Act governs administration under customary/Islamic law – ignorance of law no defence.
6 December 2006
Applicant failed to prove sufficient cause for delay in appealing; appeal dismissed with costs.
Civil procedure — extension of time to appeal — sufficient cause required — burden on applicant to prove unavailability of certified copies — documentary credibility (tampered ERV receipt) critical.
5 December 2006
5 December 2006
Visual identification corroborated by dying declaration and conduct proved common intention and murder; conviction and death sentence imposed.
Criminal law – Visual identification (Wazir Aman guidelines) – dying declaration corroboration – common intention (s.23 Penal Code) – inference of malice from weapon, multiple wounds and theft.
4 December 2006
Appellate court upholds trial findings that family sale/gift and conduct established deceased's ownership despite lack of formal registration.
Probate and administration – ownership of land and house included in estate – family sale or gift – non-registration of right of occupancy not necessarily fatal to ownership – appellate deference to trial courts' credibility and factual findings.
4 December 2006
4 December 2006
Court dismissed appellants' appeal: pleas were unequivocal, procedural irregularity non-prejudicial, five-year sentences upheld.
* Criminal law – Plea of guilty – Whether plea equivocal or unequivocal – Effect of clear oral admissions; * Criminal procedure – Admission of exhibits and accused’s written statements after conviction – Procedural irregularity versus prejudice/failure of justice; * Sentencing – Review for excessiveness – appellate restraint where sentence justified by circumstances.
1 December 2006
Visual identification at dusk and failure to follow mandatory preliminary‑hearing procedure rendered the applicant's conviction unsafe.
Criminal law — Robbery with violence — Visual identification — Identification at dusk amid tall vegetation and without descriptive particulars is unsafe. Criminal procedure — Preliminary hearing — s.192(3) Criminal Procedure Act No.9 of 1985 — Requirement to prepare, read and sign memorandum of agreed facts is mandatory; non‑compliance vitiates the trial.
1 December 2006
November 2006
30 November 2006
27 November 2006
Whether appellants were permanent monthly employees or casual daily-paid workers; court held they were casual.
* Employment law – characterization of employment – whether workers were permanent monthly employees or casual/daily-paid labourers – reliance on signed contracts, attendance registers and payment records. * Evidence – documentary and oral evidence admissibility and weight where exhibits were not objected to. * Labour procedure – adequacy of labour officer's computation of alleged underpayments.
24 November 2006
Where statute allows fine or imprisonment the court should prefer a fine; custodial and excessive fines were illegal.
* Road Traffic Act, s.63(2)(b) – sentencing limits – statutory maximum fine and minimum imprisonment. * Sentencing – option of fine or imprisonment – preference for fine unless exceptional moral turpitude. * Illegality of sentence where fine exceeds statutory maximum and imprisonment is below statutory minimum. * Mitigatory factors and prevalence of offence in sentencing.
24 November 2006
Insufficient and uncorroborated evidence, including a post-incident payment, cannot sustain an adultery finding or damages award.
Civil procedure — second appeal limited to points of law or obvious misdirection; Evidence — adultery claims require credible direct or corroborated circumstantial evidence; Interested witness — testimony requires corroboration; Payment/settlement — compensation paid does not conclusively prove adultery; Damages — award for adultery must be justified and consider customary factors (Law of Marriage Act s.74(2)).
24 November 2006
Leave to appeal refused where dispute involved factual findings on defamation and qualified privilege, not a point of law.
Civil procedure – leave to appeal – application under wrong statutory provision – merits involve factual determination on defamation and qualified privilege; test for defamation is objective (third‑party perception).
23 November 2006
Unreliable identification and absence of an admissible cautioned statement rendered the prosecution case insufficient; accused acquitted.
Criminal law – sufficiency of prosecution evidence under section 293 – visual identification – reliability and conditions for identification (Waziki Amani guidelines) – inadmissibility/value of uncproduced cautioned statement.
20 November 2006