This document summarizes a Supreme Court of Zimbabwe case from 1985 regarding whether Zimbabwean courts have jurisdiction over a crime committed outside of Zimbabwe. The appellant, a Zimbabwean government employee, was charged with theft of money from the Zimbabwe Representative Mission in Belgium. He argued the Zimbabwean courts lacked jurisdiction. The Supreme Court held that a more flexible approach is needed regarding jurisdiction for crimes with impacts in multiple countries. While embassies are not considered the territory of the sending state, Zimbabwe could exercise jurisdiction over the appellant as a Zimbabwean national.
This document summarizes a Supreme Court of Zimbabwe case from 1985 regarding whether Zimbabwean courts have jurisdiction over a crime committed outside of Zimbabwe. The appellant, a Zimbabwean government employee, was charged with theft of money from the Zimbabwe Representative Mission in Belgium. He argued the Zimbabwean courts lacked jurisdiction. The Supreme Court held that a more flexible approach is needed regarding jurisdiction for crimes with impacts in multiple countries. While embassies are not considered the territory of the sending state, Zimbabwe could exercise jurisdiction over the appellant as a Zimbabwean national.
This document summarizes a Supreme Court of Zimbabwe case from 1985 regarding whether Zimbabwean courts have jurisdiction over a crime committed outside of Zimbabwe. The appellant, a Zimbabwean government employee, was charged with theft of money from the Zimbabwe Representative Mission in Belgium. He argued the Zimbabwean courts lacked jurisdiction. The Supreme Court held that a more flexible approach is needed regarding jurisdiction for crimes with impacts in multiple countries. While embassies are not considered the territory of the sending state, Zimbabwe could exercise jurisdiction over the appellant as a Zimbabwean national.
This document summarizes a Supreme Court of Zimbabwe case from 1985 regarding whether Zimbabwean courts have jurisdiction over a crime committed outside of Zimbabwe. The appellant, a Zimbabwean government employee, was charged with theft of money from the Zimbabwe Representative Mission in Belgium. He argued the Zimbabwean courts lacked jurisdiction. The Supreme Court held that a more flexible approach is needed regarding jurisdiction for crimes with impacts in multiple countries. While embassies are not considered the territory of the sending state, Zimbabwe could exercise jurisdiction over the appellant as a Zimbabwean national.
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S v MHARAPARA
1985 (2) ZLR 211 (SC)
Division: Supreme Court, Harare Judges: Gubbay, Beck and McNally JJA Subject Area: Criminal Appeal Date: 24 July and 17 October 1985
International Law — jurisdiction of Zimbabwean courts in respect of criminal offences
committed outside of Zimbabwe. Appellant was charged with the theft of the equivalent in Belgian francs of Z$30 499,82 whilst he was based in Belgium and attached to the Zimbabwe Representative Mission. The theft was only discovered after the appellant had left Belgium and returned to Zimbabwe. On a charge of theft being put to the appellant on trial before the High Court of Zimbabwe, an exception to the charge was taken on the grounds that the Zimbabwean courts had no jurisdiction to deal with the matter. The exception having been dismissed, the appellant appealed. Held that there is no justification for a rigid adherence to the principle that with the exception of treason only the common law crimes perpetrated within the borders of Zimbabwe are punishable. That principle is becoming decreasingly appropriate to the facts of international life. The inevitable consequence of the development of society along sophisticated lines and the growth of technology have led crimes to become more and more complex and their capacity for having victims even greater. A strict interpretation of the principle of territoriality could create injustice where the constituent elements of the crime occur in more than one state or where the locus criminis is fortuitous so far as the harm flowing from the crime is concerned. A more flexible and realistic approach based on the place of impact, or of intended impact, of the crime must be favoured. Page 212 of 1985 (2) ZLR 211 (SC) Cases cited: Paweni & Anor v Attorney General 1984 (2) ZLR 39 (SC); 1985 (3) SA 720 (ZSC) Radwan v Radwan [1972] 3 All ER 967 (Fam D) Cox v Army Council [1962] 1 All ER 880 (HL) S v A 1979 RLR 69 (GD); 1979 (4) SA 51 (R) Treacy v Director of Public Prosecutions [1971] 1 All ER 110 (HL) R v Baxter [1971] 2 All ER 359 (CA) Director of Public Prosecutions v Stonehouse [1977] 2 All ER 909 (HL) Strassheim v Daly (1911) 221 US 280 K Laue for the appellant I Chatikobo for the respondent GUBBAY JA: On 3 June 1985 the appellant appeared before the High Court in answer to an indictment alleging that during the period extending from 25 June 1984 to 6 July 1984, and at the Zimbabwe Representative Mission in Brussels, Belgium, he had stolen money, in the course of employment, amounting to 1 524 981 Belgian Francs (the equivalent of Z$30 499,62), the property of the Zimbabwe Government. He did not plead but, in terms of s 156(1) of the Criminal Procedure and Evidence Act [Chapter 59], excepted to the indictment with a view to having it quashed, on the ground that the court had no jurisdiction to try him upon an averment that the theft had been committed in Belgium. For the purpose of ruling upon the exception it was agreed that the learned trial judge (Mfalila J) should have regard to the facts contained in the written outline of the State’s case, which reads: 1. The accused is aged about 30 years and is employed by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs as an Executive Officer. At the time of the commission of his offence, he was based abroad with the Zimbabwe Embassy in Brussels, Belgium. His duties involved administration and the control of finance. 2. On the 12th June 1984 the accused received written notification from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs’ Head Office in Harare that he was being recalled home for re-assignment. He had been in Brussels since the 31st December 1981. 3. On several occasions over a period of two weeks, dating from about the 25th June 1984 to the 6th July 1984, the accused stole from the Zimbabwe Embassy in Brussels money in the sum of 1 524 981 (one million five hundred and twenty-four thousand nine hundred and eighty-one) Belgian Francs, (which is equivalent to Z$30 499,62). Page 213 of 1985 (2) ZLR 211 (SC) The money was stolen in the following manner: 110 109 Belgian Francs from cash receipts not deposited to the Embassy Account, 1 134 872 in the form of cheques which he got by supplying false information to his superiors. These moneys above were supposed to have been banked by the accused but the accused converted the money to his own use. The accused also fraudulently got a member of the Embassy in Brussels to countersign a requisition to transfer 280 000 Belgian Francs from the Embassy Account. After withdrawing the money the accused converted it to his own use. 4. Of the Z$30 499,20 stolen, nothing has been recovered. To this was added the further accepted fact that the appellant had departed from Belgium prior to the alleged offence being discovered. After hearing full argument Mfalila J dismissed the exception, holding that Zimbabwean courts have jurisdiction over the appellant in accordance with the nationality or active personality principle of international law. He rejected the main contention advanced by the State that jurisdiction may be assumed where a person performs an act outside the country which is a crime if performed inside the country and a harmful effect of the act is felt by the victim there. In other words, that our courts should assume jurisdiction in every case except where an act is performed wholly outside the country and no harmful effect is felt inside the country.* Following upon the ruling of the learned judge the appellant was not called upon to plead to the indictment as an intention to appeal was intimated. The appeal was duly noted pursuant to s 44(1) of the High Court of Zimbabwe Act 1981, which provides that “an appeal in any criminal case shall lie to the Supreme Court from any judgment of the High Court, whether in the exercise of its original or its appellate jurisdiction.” Despite an initial argument to the contrary advanced by Mr Chatikobo, who appeared for the respondent, there can be no question but that the appeal is properly before this court. Although interlocutory in nature, the decision dismissing the exception was clearly a judgment given in a “criminal case”, thereby affording an appeal as of right. See Paweni & Anor v Attorney-General 1984 (2) ZLR 39 (SC) at 41D-42G; 1985 (3) SA 720 (ZSC) at 722B-723A. Page 214 of 1985 (2) ZLR 211 (SC) At the outset it is as well to indicate that Mr Chatikobo conceded that the Zimbabwean Embassy in Brussels is not a geographical extension of the physical terrain of Zimbabwe, but forms part of the territory of Belgium. Consequently the clear implication that the appellant stole at least some moneys while within the confines of the Embassy, is no foundation upon which to assume jurisdiction against him. I am satisfied with the correctness of that concession. I agree entirely with the submission made to, and accepted by, Cumming-Bruce J (as he then was) in Radwan v Radwan [1972] 3 All ER 967 (Fam D) at 971h that: . . . the doctrine that an embassy or consulate is strictly the territory of the sending state is now, and has for long, been regarded as a heresy by the unanimous opinion of those academic authors who command respect in the exposition of international law. The popular myth is firmly laid to rest in Satow’s Guide to Diplomatic Practice, 5th ed at p 107, where it is stated: The term ‘exterritoriality’, or ‘extraterritoriality’, is sometimes used to denote the totality of privileges and immunities accorded to diplomatic agents, their families and subordinate staff, or to describe the status of embassy premises. But it is now everywhere accepted that it does not mean that the diplomat is not legally present in the receiving state or that the embassy is deemed to be foreign territory. Marriages, or crimes, occurring on diplomatic mission premises, are regarded in law as taking place in the territory of the receiving state. See further O’Connell, International Law 2nd ed vol 2 at p 903; Fawcett, The Law of Nations (1971) at pp 64-65; O Oppenheim’s International Law 8th e, vol 1 para 390. In his discussion on the principle of nationality the learned judge a quo said* : Under this principle in International Law, a State has jurisdiction with respect to any crime committed outside its territory by a person or persons who is or are its nationals at the time when the offence was committed or when he is or they are prosecuted and punished. So long as there is no conflict with the territorial principle and the rights of other States, there can be no breach of International Law in a State assuming Page 215 of 1985 (2) ZLR 211 (SC) such jurisdiction. It is, however, a principle which should not lightly be applied in view of the possible conflict with the legitimate rights of other States; . . . But a case such as the present, involving as it does a member of the country’s Diplomatic Service abroad, is a fit case for the application of the principle. The accused could not be tried in Belgium unless Zimbabwe lifted his diplomatic immunity there, and since he was no longer within the Belgian jurisdiction by the time the offence came to light, there is no way in which Zimbabwe could send him back to Belgium to stand trial. The situation, therefore, would amount to a non-trial of the accused and this I am satisfied would amount to a grave injustice. That exposé does not, I venture to think, accurately reflect upon the nationality or active personality principle. As I perceive the position, there is no rule of international law directing or obliging states to exercise criminal jurisdiction over their nationals for offences committed abroad. International law merely permits every state to apply its jurisdiction against its own citizens even when they are situate outside its boundaries. See O’Connell op cit at p 823; Oppenheim op cit at p 330. Thus the fact that customary international law is part of the municipal law of a state does not assist, because there is only a permissive principle involved and not a mandatory rule. The permissibility under international law for a state to exercise jurisdiction is not a sufficient basis for the exercise of jurisdiction by a municipal court of that state. A municipal court must be satisfied in addition that the municipal law itself authorises the trial of a national for an offence committed abroad which would be punishable if committed at home. The matter is concisely put by O’Connell op cit at pp 824-825 in this way: There is no restriction on the competence in international law of a State to prosecute its own nationals for acts done on foreign territory. Whether or not a prosecution can be sustained is entirely a matter of municipal law, which may choose to disinterest itself in the activities of its nationals extraterritorially. Until the middle of the nineteenth century there was a tendency to think that international law allowed no jurisdiction over either nationals or aliens in respect of acts committed on alien territory, and the maxim of Paulus ‘extra territiorium jus dicenti impune non paretur’ was frequently quoted in support of this view. However, English and American courts have held that there is no restriction on the competence of the legislature to extend the criminal law to cover the acts of nationals abroad, and that it is entirely a question of construction to what extent it has done so. . . . Page 216 of 1985 (2) ZLR 211 (SC) In the absence of statute, however, Anglo-American jurisdiction is, as a matter of common law, territorial. See also Cox v Army Council [1962] 1 All ER 880 (HL); Joubert The Law of South Africa, vol 5, para 569; Lansdown and Campbell South African Criminal Law and Procedure, vol 5 at p 8. It is therefore essential that there be in existence some rule of municipal law, either in statute or common law, which provides for the exercise of jurisdiction in such a case. In this country there is no legislation giving extraterritorial jurisdiction to the courts where nationals commit thefts abroad. It would be very much a new departure, unsupported by authority, for the courts to assume jurisdiction simply because of the inability of bringing the appellant to trial in Belgium or because his prosecution here would not involve any interference with Belgium’s legitimate affairs. While accepting the proposition that the alleged theft in Brussels may have harmed the Zimbabwe Government at home, Mfalila J declined to exercise jurisdiction on that ground. It is apparent that he was influenced greatly by the judgment in S v A 1979 RLR 69 (GD); 1979(4) SA 51 (R). In that case I had occasion to examine the English decisions in Treacy v Director of Public Prosecutions [1971] 1 All ER 110 (HL), R v Baxter [1971] 2 All ER 359 (CA) and Director of Public Prosecutions v Stonehouse [1977] 2 All ER 909 (HL), which were relied upon by State counsel in support of the submission that the narrow ground upon which jurisdiction was assumed in the past, where a theft is committed entirely outside the territorial boundaries, had been developed and extended. My analysis of those judgments led me to express the following view at 80D-F and 81D- F (57F-G and 58E-F respectively of the South African report): I have quoted at length from the speeches of the learned Law Lords because in my opinion Mr Oshry is correct in saying that their remarks were not intended to go beyond a situation where the harmful effect to the victim in England is the actual obtaining of his property there, or an attempt to obtain it there. It is a ‘result-crime’, as Lord Diplock put it, the result being the harmful effect to the victim in England by unlawfully obtaining his property from him there, or attempting to do so. I can find nothing in the speeches which implies that, if the victim, while physically in England, has his property stolen abroad, and all the physical acts in pursuance of such theft were committed abroad, the offence would nonetheless be triable in England because of the harm the offence caused the victim in England. Page 217 of 1985 (2) ZLR 211 (SC) And: . . . the principle laid down in the Baxter and Stonehouse cases . . . relates to offences such as fraud or theft by false pretences where the false representation in its entirety is made by the offender out of the country but is directed at the obtaining of property within it. Where the physical acts take place outside the country, the subject-matter must always be within it in order for the offender to be amenable to the local jurisdiction. Having carefully re-read the English trilogy I am now firmly of the opinion that the reasoning therein does not entirely support the principle I have sought to enunciate. It would seem to be too restrictive. While it may be that on the facts of two of those cases the deception was aimed at obtaining the property of a victim in England, and in that sense its impact could have been felt there, the underlying ratio was that a court may exercise jurisdiction where either a substantial element of the offence or the harmful effect thereof occurred within its territorial boundaries. It was not, as I understand it, that in the absence of an attempt to abstract or the actual abstraction of the property in England where the victim resided, no harmful effect could possibly be felt by him there. I shall illustrate this by reference to the three cases. In Treacy v Director of Public Prosecutions, supra, Lord Diplock was the only member of the House to approach the problem along unconventional lines. He considered that the presumption against extra-territorial jurisdiction was based in international rules of comity and said that there was no reason in comity why persons who did physical acts outside England which had harmful consequences inside the country should not be liable to punishment if they subsequently came to England. He expressed himself thus at 122a- c: Nor . . . can I see any reason in comity to prevent Parliament from rendering liable to punishment, if they subsequently come to England, persons who have done outside the United Kingdom physical acts which have had harmful consequences on victims in England. The State is under a correlative duty to those who owe obedience to its laws to protect their interests and one of the purposes of criminal law is to afford such protection by deterring, by threat of punishment, conduct by other persons which is calculated to harm those interests. Comity gives no right to a State to insist that any person may with impunity do physical acts in its own territory which have harmful consequences to persons within the territory of another State. It may be under no obligation in Page 218 of 1985 (2) ZLR 211 (SC) comity to punish those acts itself, but it has no ground for complaint in international law if the State in which the harmful consequences had their effect punishes, when they do enter its territories, persons who did such acts. The unanimous judgment of the Court of Appeal in R v Baxter, supra, was delivered by Sachs LJ. In essence it was that the English courts had jurisdiction to try a charge of attempting to obtain property by deception where letters claiming moneys from two football pools companies on a false pretence were posted in Northern Ireland and arrived in England where they were read by but did not deceive the management of either company. It was relevant that from the moment of dispatch until the moment the claims finally failed, the appellant had never left Northern Ireland. The object of sending the letters was to get the pools companies to dispatch money from England, and an actual claim to the money was communicated there. If the attempt had succeeded, the money would have been obtained within the jurisdiction. Clearly the deception was aimed at the property of victims within the jurisdiction. It was said at 362a-b: The older authorities deal inter alia with the origin of the rule relating to jurisdiction; they underline as Lord Diplock pointed out in Treacy v Director of Public Prosecutions, that in modern times its only substantial foundation is based on internal comity which leans against the courts of this country punishing those who in another country have done something which neither has caused nor could cause injury to persons or property here. But the high water mark on the question of jurisdiction where all the physical acts are perpetrated externally was reached by the House of Lords in Director of Public Prosecutions v Stonehouse, supra. The facts were these: In July and September 1974, Stonehouse, a man prominent in English politics, insured his life in England for the benefit of his wife, for a total amount of £125 000. On 19 November 1974 he flew to Florida, ostensibly for a business meeting. The next day he simulated his death by drowning, stating that he was going for a swim and not returning to his hotel. In fact he travelled to Australia under an assumed name. There he was recognised on 24 December 1974. No claim was ever made for the policy money though the news of his supposed death had been published broadly in England, reaching both the insurance company and his wife — the latter being an innocent party. He was tried at the Central Criminal Court on a charge of attempting to obtain property by deception and the jury convicted him. The Court of Appeal upheld the Page 219 of 1985 (2) ZLR 211 (SC) conviction. On a further appeal to the House of Lords the point of law certified was: Whether the offence of attempting on 20 November 1974 to obtain property in England by deception, the final act alleged to constitute the offence of attempt having occurred outside the jurisdiction of the English courts, is triable in an English court, all the remaining acts necessary to constitute the complete offence being intended to take place in England. In dismissing the appeal it was held that the principle that the English courts have jurisdiction where what was done outside the country caused the obtaining of property by deception in England from the person to whom it belongs, was sufficiently wide to cover their jurisdiction to try the inchoate offence of an attempt to obtain it. With the exception of Viscount Dilhorne, the other four members of the House followed Lord Diplock’s approach in Treacy’s case, supra. Lord Diplock himself said at 916h-j: Once it is appreciated that territorial jurisdiction over a ‘result-crime’ does not depend on acts done by the offender in England but on consequences which he causes to occur in England, I see no ground for holding that an attempt to commit a crime which, if the attempt succeeded, would be justiciable in England does not also fall within the jurisdiction of the English courts, notwithstanding that the physical acts intended to produce the proscribed consequences in England were all of them done abroad. Lord Keith of Kinkel observed at 937j-938a: English criminal law has consistently adopted the approach, in cases involving a foreign element, that, where an act done abroad has resulted in harmful consequences in England, the actor may be tried by an English court. He continued at 939h-940b: In my opinion it is not the present law of England that an offence is committed if no effect of an act done abroad is felt here, even though it was the intention that it should be. Thus if a person on the Scottish bank Page 220 of 1985 (2) ZLR 211 (SC) of the Tweed, where it forms the border between Scotland and England, were to fire a rifle at someone on the English bank, with intent to kill him, and actually did so, he would be guilty of murder under English law. If he fired with similar intent but missed his intended victim, he would be guilty of attempted murder under English law, because the presence of the bullet in England would be an intended effect of his act. But if he pressed the trigger and his weapon misfired, he would be guilty of no offence under the law of England, provided at least that the intended victim was unaware of the attempt, since no effect would have been felt there. If, however, the intended victim were aware of the rifle being pointed at him, and was thus put into a state of alarm, an effect would have been felt in England and a crime would have been committed there. The result may seem illogical, and there would appear to be nothing contrary to international comity in holding that an act done abroad intended to result in damage in England, but which for some reason independent of the actor’s volition had no effect there, was justiciable in England. But if that were to be the law, I consider that it would require to be enacted by Parliament. Consistent with what I comprehend as the broad principle laid down in the English cases are the similar remarks of the legendary Mr Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, when delivering the unanimous opinion of the Supreme Court of the United States in Strassheim v Daily (1911) 221 US 280 at 284-285: If a jury should believe the evidence, and find that Daily did the acts that led Armstrong to betray his trust, deceived the board of control, and induced by fraud the payment by the state, the usage of the civilized world would warrant Michigan in punishing him, although he never had set foot in the state until after the fraud was complete. Acts done outside a jurisdiction, but intended to produce and producing detrimental effects within it, justify a state in punishing the cause of the harm as if he had been present at the effect, if the state should succeed in getting him within its power. That case is apposite because, like the present, the external commission of a common law offence and the concept of an extension of territorial jurisdiction, were under consideration. It appears that Daily, while in the state of Illinois, and with the connivance of the prison warden Armstrong, perpetrated a fraud upon the board of control of the Michigan state prison by representing that certain items of machinery sold and delivered to the prison Page 221 of 1985 (2) ZLR 211 (SC) were new, when to his knowledge they were second-hand. Significantly also the learned authors Lansdown and Campbell op cit at pp 9 and 11, in their treatment of the English decisions, accept the applicability of the harmful effect principle to the criminal common law in South Africa, and do not suggest that where what is involved is an offence against property, its operation is confined to instances where such property, as well as the victim, are within the jurisdiction. This is what they say: The general principle of the common law that jurisdiction does not extend to acts committed abroad appears to be losing ground in the face of a trend indicating that where the constituent elements of a crime occurred in different countries, the offence may be tried in any jurisdiction where any of those elements, or their harmful effect, occurred. And: It is accordingly submitted that there may be circumstances where, in a case reflecting foreign and domestic elements, it becomes irrelevant to ask where the crime was committed or whether the last essential act occurred within the territory of the Republic. Our courts may find themselves not compelled to disclaim jurisdiction if satisfied that either a substantial element of the offence or the harmful effect thereof occurred within the Republic. It is conceded that where the foreign elements in an offence predominate the connection between the physical acts of the offender or their harmful effects, on the one hand, and the Republic, on the other, may indeed be so tenuous that our courts will hesitate to exercise criminal jurisdiction. With regard to the law of Zimbabwe, I can see no justification for a rigid adherence to the principle that, with the exception of treason, only those common law crimes perpetrated within our borders are punishable. That principle is becoming decreasingly appropriate to the facts of international life. The facility of communication and of movement from country to country is no longer restricted or difficult. Both may be undertaken expeditiously and at short notice. Past is the era when almost invariably the preparation and completion of a crime and the presence of the criminal would coincide in one place, with that place being the one most harmed by its commission. The inevitable consequence of the development of society along sophisticated lines and the growth of technology have led crimes to become more and more complex and their capacity for harming victims even greater. They are no longer as simple in nature or as limited in their effect as they used to be. Thus a strict interpretation of the principle of territoriality could create injustice where the constituent elements of the crime occur in more than one state or where the locus commissi is fortuitous so far as the harm flowing from the crime is concerned. Any reluctance to liberalise the principle and adopt Anglo-American thinking, could well result in the negation of the object of criminal law in protecting the public and punishing the wrongdoer. A more flexible and realistic approach based on the place of impact, or of intended impact, of the crime must be favoured. Page 222 of 1985 (2) ZLR 211 (SC) Accordingly, I am satisfied that although all the constituent elements of the theft occurred in Belgium, in particular the obtaining of the money there, the State is nonetheless entitled to proceed upon the present indictment and adduce evidence at the trial, if such is available, to establish the fact that the harmful effect of the appellant’s crime was felt by the Zimbabwe Government within this country. Without intending in any way to influence the outcome of the necessary factual determination by the trial court, I would merely point out that the theft is alleged to have been committed within the precincts of the country’s Embassy in Brussels by one of its nationals posted on official diplomatic duties; that the stolen money may have formed a portion of funds remitted by Government to meet the cost of maintaining, administering and operating its Embassy in Belgium; and that it may have been necessary to replace the considerable amount of money stolen by the further transfer of foreign currency from Zimbabwe, thereby depleting the country’s much needed external reserves. For these reasons I would dismiss the appeal. Beck JA: I agree. McNally JA: I agree. Kantor & Immerman, legal practitioners for appellant Attorney-General, legal practitioners for respondent