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Magistrates Court of Vanuatu |
IN THE MAGISTRATES COURT
OF THE REPUBLIC OF VANUATU Cr. Case No. 116 of 2013
(Criminal Jurisdiction)
PUBLIC PROSECUTOR
-v-
LEVI TAROSA
Coram: Moses Peter
Court Clerk: Florina Ephraim
Appearances: John Stephen for the State Daniel Yawha for Defendant
Defendant appear in Person
JUDGMENT
Willful Evasion of Duty contrary to section 47 of the Stamp Duties Act [CAP 68].
Particulars of Offence
“LEVI TAROSA, on or about 12 October 2011 in Port Vila, you acting as an agent, lodged for your benefit, a Transfer of Lease Title NO. 12/0633/1314 in the name of Ronald Kalpuaso Sandy and Helen Sandy, being Transferors and Zheng Yu Pend being the Transferee, willfully conspired to defraud the Government of Vanuatu of payable duty in breach of section 47 of the Stamp Duties Act [CAP 68], for the sale and purchase agreement in the transfer of Lease Title No.12/0633/1314 for the consideration of VT 17,000,000 [Seventeen Million Vatu].”
To validate the criminal conviction of the Defendant; the standard of evidence required of the State is prove beyond reasonable doubt.
Section 8 (1) of the Penal Code Act [CAP 135] reads:
“No person shall be convicted of any offence unless the prosecution shall prove his guilt according to the law beyond reasonable doubt by means of evidence properly admitted; the determination of proof of guilt beyond reasonable doubt shall exclude consideration of any possibility which is merely fanciful or frivolous.”
RELEVANT LAWS
Section 47 of the Stamp Duties Act [CAP 68].
“Every person who willfully and fraudulently evades or conspires to evade, or assists another person to evade, payment of duty to which any instrument is liable under this Act shall commit and offence punishable upon conviction by a fine not exceeding VT 300,000 or imprisonment for a term not exceeding 2 years, or by both such fine and imprisonment”.
Conspiracy is covered in section 29(1) of the Penal Code.
29. Conspiracy
1) Conspiracy is an agreement, express or implied, between two or more persons to do an act which, if done, even by one person, would constitute a criminal offence.
(2) There can be no conspiracy between husband and wife.
(3) The criminal responsibility of a conspirator who voluntarily withdraws from the conspiracy before the commission of the offence shall be diminished.
(4) A conspiracy to commit a criminal offence shall be punishable only where expressly provided by any provision of law.
(5) No person shall be prosecuted as a conspirator without the consent in writing of the Public Prosecutor.
Section 71 of the Criminal Procedure Code [CAP 136]
“Every very charge or information shall contain, and shall be sufficient if it contains, a statement of the specific offence or offences with which the accused person is charged, together with such particulars as may be necessary for giving reasonable information as to the nature of the offence charged”.Section 74 reads
“The following provisions shall apply to all charges and information and, notwithstanding any rule of law or practice, a charge or an information shall, subject to the provisions of this Code not be open to objection in respect of its form or contents if it is framed in accordance with the provisions of this Code –
(a) a count of a charge or an information shall commence with a statement of the offence charged, called the statement of offence;
(b) the statement of offence shall describe the offence shortly in ordinary language, avoiding as far as possible the use of technical terms, and if the offence charged is one created by enactment, shall contain a reference to the provision of the enactment creating the offence;
(c) after the statement of the offence, particulars of such offence shall be set out in ordinary language, in which the use of technical terms shall not be necessary:
Provided that where any rule of law limits the particulars of an offence which are required to be given in a charge or an information, nothing in this paragraph shall require more particulars to be given than those so required;
(d) forms approved by the Chief Justice or forms conforming thereto as closely as possible shall be used in cases to which they are applicable, and in other cases forms to the like effect or conforming thereto as closely as possible shall be used, the statement of offence and the particulars of offence being varied according to the circumstances in each case;
(e) where a charge or an information contains more than 1 count, the counts shall be numbered consecutively.
AMENDMENT OF CHARGE
139. (1) Where it appears ears to the court that the charge is defective, either in substance or in form, the court may make such order for the alteration of the charge, either by way of amen of targe or by the suhe substitbstitution or addition of a new charge, as the court thinks necessary to meet the circumstances of the case:
Provided that
(a) where a charge is altered as aforesaid, the court shall thereupon call upon the accused person to plead to the altered charge;
(b) where a charge is so altered the accused person may demand that the witnesses or any of them be recalled and be further cross-examined by the accused person or his advocate and, in such last-mentioned event, the prosecution shall have the right to re-examine any such witness on matters arising out of such further cross-examination.
(2) An amendment may be made before a trial or at any stage of a trial before the close of the case for the prosecution.
Variance between the charge and the evidence adduced in support of it with respect to the day upon which the alleged offence was committed is not material and the charge need not be amended for such variance if it is proved that the proceedings were in fact instituted within time (if any) limited by law for the institution thereof.
Where an alteration of a charge is made under subsection (1) or there is a variance between the charge and the evidence as described in subsection (3), the court shall, if it is of the opinion that the accused person has been thereby misled, adjourn the trial for such period as may be reasonably necessary.
On the evidence before me the prosecution had strong evidence of the actions by the defendant in evading the duty owed. The defendant’s
own letter and evidence supported this. However, the court must apply the evidence to a valid charge.
Finding
I am not satisfied beyond Reasonable doubt that the prosecution has proved the charge before the court. The charge is dismissed. The defendant is thereby acquitted of the charge.
DATED at Port Vila this 16th day of August 2017
BY THE COURT
...................... MOSES PETER Senior Magistrate
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URL: http://www.paclii.org/vu/cases/VUMC/2017/6.html