Elison Javano v Samuel Lai (2010) N4140

JurisdictionPapua New Guinea
JudgeCannings J
Judgment Date10 September 2010
Citation(2010) N4140
Docket NumberCIA NO 196 0F 2009
CourtNational Court
Year2010
Judgement NumberN4140

Full Title: CIA NO 196 0F 2009; Elison Javano v Samuel Lai (2010) N4140

National Court: Cannings J

Judgment Delivered: 10 September 2010

N4140

PAPUA NEW GUINEA

[IN THE NATIONAL COURT OF JUSTICE]

CIA NO 196 0F 2009

ELISON JAVANO

Appellant

V

SAMUEL LAI

Respondent

Madang: Cannings J

2010: 14 May, 10 September

APPEAL

TRAFFIC OFFENCES – appeal against dismissal of information by District Court – charge of driving motor vehicle on public street without due care and attention: Motor Traffic Act, Section 17(2) – whether District Court properly considered elements of offence – whether any error of law made by District Court in finding driver not guilty.

Two vehicles travelling in opposite directions collided on a one-way bridge. A give way sign was at one end of the bridge and faced the driver – the respondent – charged by the police with driving without due care and attention. The respondent was found not guilty by the District Court based on a finding of fact that when his vehicle entered the bridge the other vehicle had not entered the bridge and was not in sight. A part-owner of the other vehicle, aggrieved by the decision of the District Court, appealed against the decision and sought an order that it be quashed and the charge be remitted to the District Court for retrial. The grounds of appeal were that the trial Magistrate erred in law by: (a) not considering the police traffic report; (b) not considering the elements of the offence; (c) giving insufficient weight to evidence of prosecution witnesses; (d) considering a matter that was not in evidence: his personal experience of driving over the bridge.

Held:

(1) None of the grounds of appeal was upheld as the trial Magistrate: (a) considered the police traffic report; (b) correctly set out and applied the elements of the offence; (c) carefully assessed the evidence of the prosecution witnesses; and (d) legitimately took judicial notice of his own experience driving on the bridge.

(2) There is no rule of law that says that if there is a collision between two vehicles on a one-way bridge and one of the vehicles has faced a give way sign prior to entering the bridge, the driver of that vehicle is at fault.

(3) Each case under Section 17(2) of the Motor Traffic Act must be assessed on its merits, the court being obliged by Section 17(3) of the Motor Traffic Act to “have regard to all the circumstances of the case”.

(4) It was open to a reasonable Magistrate, given the evidence placed before the court, to conclude that it was not proven beyond reasonable doubt that the respondent had failed to drive with due care and attention.

(5) The District Court made no error of law. The appeal was accordingly dismissed.

Cases cited

The following cases are cited in the judgment:

Devlyn David v The State (2005) SC881

Onama Andrew v The State (2009) SC997

APPEAL

This was an appeal from a decision of the District Court finding a driver not guilty of a motor traffic offence.

Counsel

J Sipa, for the appellant

No appearance for the respondent

10 September, 2010

1. CANNINGS J: This is an appeal against a decision of the Ramu District Court (Mr R Dovina presiding) to find the driver of a truck not guilty of a traffic offence. The truck driver, the respondent, Samuel Lai, was charged with driving without due care and attention following a collision between the Mitsubishi Dyna truck he was driving and a 15-seater Nissan Urvan bus on the Taki Creek Bridge, near Sangkiang village, in the Ramu area of Madang Province on 28 May 2009.

2. The Taki Creek Bridge is on the Bruce Jephcott Highway, the main highway between Lae and Madang. It is a one-lane bridge. The respondent was driving the Dyna from Madang towards Lae. On that side of the bridge there was a give way sign facing him. The Urvan entered the bridge from the Lae side. It was a PMV, carrying passengers from Goroka to Madang. The bridge is 22.1 metres long. The Dyna and the Urvan collided at the Lae end of the bridge. No one was physically injured directly, though the respondent was assaulted immediately after the collision by the boss-crew of the Urvan (who happened to be a part-owner of the Urvan, which was less than three months old) and also by some passengers on the Urvan.

3. The OIC of the Highway Patrol division of the Ramu Police, Sgt Rodney Joppa, investigated the incident and determined that the respondent was at fault and charged him with one count of driving without due care and attention contrary to Section 17(2) of the Motor Traffic Act.

4. The matter went to trial and the prosecution called three witnesses: the driver and the boss-crew of the Urvan and Sgt Joppa. A sketch plan of the incident and the police traffic report prepared by Sgt Joppa were admitted into evidence. The respondent, Mr Lai, gave evidence in his defence.

5. His Worship, Mr Dovina, considered the competing evidence about which vehicle entered the bridge first and determined that, in fact, the Dyna entered first and that when it did so the Urvan was not in sight. He found that the driver of the Urvan, Mr Blacky Binefa, was at fault. He therefore found the respondent not guilty.

THE APPEAL

6. The appeal was filed by another part-owner of the Urvan, Elison Javano. Normally an appeal against the dismissal of an information, which is a criminal matter, would be brought by the Secretary for Justice with the leave of the National Court under Sections 219(2) and (3) (appeal to National Court) of the District Courts Act. However, Section 219(1) allows “a person aggrieved” by an order of a District Court, including an order dismissing an information, to appeal to the National Court; and for that reason, and in view of the fact that there was no objection taken to the National Court hearing the appeal, I am satisfied that Mr Javano has standing and the appeal is properly before the National Court. I granted leave to a friend of Mr Javano, Mr J Sipa, to argue the appeal.

GROUNDS OF APPEAL

7. It is argued that the trial Magistrate erred in law by:

(a) not considering the police traffic report;

(b) not considering the elements of the offence;

(c) giving insufficient weight to the evidence of prosecution witnesses;

(d) considering a matter that was not in evidence, viz his personal experience of driving over the bridge from both directions.

GROUND (a): NOT CONSIDERING THE POLICE TRAFFIC REPORT

8. The argument is that the police traffic report, which concluded that the respondent was at fault, was not considered. However, it is evident from his Worship’s nine-page written judgment that he did consider the police traffic report, together with the oral evidence of Sgt Joppa and the sketch plan of the incident prepared by Sgt Joppa. His Worship paid close attention to the measurements of the length and width of the bridge and the estimated point of impact of the two vehicles. His Worship considered that the investigation report of the incident compiled by Sgt Joppa was inconsistent with his evidence in chief. A police traffic report carries no special status as a piece of evidence. It necessarily contains an opinion by the author of the report as to how a motor vehicle accident occurred and who, if anyone, was at fault. The report should be weighed alongside other pieces of evidence.

9. I find that the learned trial Magistrate did not err in his treatment of the police traffic report. Ground (a) of the appeal is dismissed.

GROUND (b): NOT CONSIDERING ELEMENTS OF THE OFFENCE

10. This ground of appeal is actually expressed as “his Worship erred in law by not considering the cause of action”. I have interpreted it as an argument that his Worship did not properly set out the elements of the offence. It is important that a trial court in a criminal case demonstrate through its reasons for decision that it had had a legally correct understanding of the elements of the offence with which the defendant (also known as the accused) is charged. A failure to properly set out and focus on the elements of the relevant offence can lead to a miscarriage of justice (Devlyn David v The State (2005) SC881, Onama Andrew v The State (2009) SC997).

11. Did the learned trial Magistrate properly set out, and apply, the elements of the offence? His Worship made it clear that the offence with which the defendant was charged was created by Section 17(2) of the Motor Traffic Act, which states:

A person who drives a motor vehicle on a public street without due care and attention, or without reasonable consideration for other road users, is guilty of an offence.

Penalty: A fine not exceeding K500.00.

12. His Worship stated that:

The essential elements of the charge are that:

(i) A person

(ii) Drove a particular vehicle

(iii) On a public street

(iv) Without due care and attention.

13...

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5 practice notes
  • Sam Manasseh v The State
    • Papua New Guinea
    • National Court
    • December 16, 2011
    ...as correct. Cases cited The following cases are cited in the judgment: Danny Yai v Joseph Pindu (2009) N3630 Elison Javano v Samuel Lai (2010) N4140 Epeli Davinga v The State [1995] PNGLR 263 Evangelical Lutheran Church of New Guinea v Peninsula Hotels Pty Ltd [1977] PNGLR 147 Hami Yawari v......
  • Alfred Goi v Robert Sek
    • Papua New Guinea
    • National Court
    • May 23, 2014
    ...and the State (2002) SC687 Samson Dacany v Noah Taia (2002) N2316 Application by Rodney Rakum (2005) N2901 Elison Javano v Samuel Lai (2010) N4140 Whagi Mek Plantations Limited v Aip Kondim, CIA No. 21 of 2009, Unnumbered & Unreported Judgment of David, J delivered on 6th of June 2011 at Mi......
  • Wahgi Mek Plantation Limited v Yekua Yap (2013) N5303
    • Papua New Guinea
    • National Court
    • June 20, 2013
    ...District Court Act—need not the party to action giving rise to Appeal to National Court. Cases cited: Elison Javano v Samuel Lai (2010) N4140; Samson Dacany v Noah Taia (2002) N2316 Decision 1. POOLE J: Background: The Respondent instituted this Application by Motion, filed on 8th April 201......
  • Serah Komati v Ben Aki
    • Papua New Guinea
    • National Court
    • February 22, 2018
    ...SC687 Application by Anderson Agiru (2003) SC704 Asoka Seneviratne v Graham Chaffey (2000) N2014 Dacany v Taia (2002) N2316 Javano v Lai (2010) N4140 Kerry Lerro v Philip Stagg (2006) N3050 Mong v Mong [1997] PNGLR 171 Opre Wama v Alice Palme (2012) N4714 Philip Takori v Simon Yagari (2008)......
  • Request a trial to view additional results
5 cases
  • Sam Manasseh v The State
    • Papua New Guinea
    • National Court
    • December 16, 2011
    ...as correct. Cases cited The following cases are cited in the judgment: Danny Yai v Joseph Pindu (2009) N3630 Elison Javano v Samuel Lai (2010) N4140 Epeli Davinga v The State [1995] PNGLR 263 Evangelical Lutheran Church of New Guinea v Peninsula Hotels Pty Ltd [1977] PNGLR 147 Hami Yawari v......
  • Alfred Goi v Robert Sek
    • Papua New Guinea
    • National Court
    • May 23, 2014
    ...and the State (2002) SC687 Samson Dacany v Noah Taia (2002) N2316 Application by Rodney Rakum (2005) N2901 Elison Javano v Samuel Lai (2010) N4140 Whagi Mek Plantations Limited v Aip Kondim, CIA No. 21 of 2009, Unnumbered & Unreported Judgment of David, J delivered on 6th of June 2011 at Mi......
  • Wahgi Mek Plantation Limited v Yekua Yap (2013) N5303
    • Papua New Guinea
    • National Court
    • June 20, 2013
    ...District Court Act—need not the party to action giving rise to Appeal to National Court. Cases cited: Elison Javano v Samuel Lai (2010) N4140; Samson Dacany v Noah Taia (2002) N2316 Decision 1. POOLE J: Background: The Respondent instituted this Application by Motion, filed on 8th April 201......
  • Serah Komati v Ben Aki
    • Papua New Guinea
    • National Court
    • February 22, 2018
    ...SC687 Application by Anderson Agiru (2003) SC704 Asoka Seneviratne v Graham Chaffey (2000) N2014 Dacany v Taia (2002) N2316 Javano v Lai (2010) N4140 Kerry Lerro v Philip Stagg (2006) N3050 Mong v Mong [1997] PNGLR 171 Opre Wama v Alice Palme (2012) N4714 Philip Takori v Simon Yagari (2008)......
  • Request a trial to view additional results

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