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LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 3

CHAPTER 10:01

CRIMINAL LAW (PROCEDURE) ACT

ARRANGEMENT OF SECTIONS

PRELIMINARY

SECTION
1. Short title.
2. Interpretation.
3. Application of the Act.

PART I

GENERAL PROVISIONS

TITLE 1—BUSINESS OF THE COURT

4. Appointment of causes to be tried on each day of the sitting.


5. Time of trial of causes.
6. Adding cause after transmission of list.
7. Calendar of causes for trial.
8. State prosecutors.
9. Jurisdiction with respect to counties.
10. Bringing of prisoners before the Court for trial.
11. Discontinuance of proclamation against vice.

Gaol Delivery

12. Prisons to be delivered at sittings of the Court.


13. Bringing of certain classes of prisoners before the court for
delivery.
14. Right of prisoner in certain cases to be tried or bailed.
15. Prisoners entitled to be discharged.
16. Procedure of the Court in matters not provided for.

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

4 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

TITLE 2—LAW AND PRACTICE AS TO JURIES

SECTION
17. Constitution of jury.
18. Abolition of jury de mediatate linguae.

Qualification of Jurors and Jury Lists

19. Qualification of Jurors.


20. Disqualification of certain persons from jury service.
21. Exemption of certain persons.
22. Disqualification or exemption to be claimed on revision of jury
list.
23. Information to Registrar for preparation of lists.
24. Publication of list by Registrar.
25. Revision of lists.
26. Appeal from decision of revising officer.
27. Jurors’ book to be true record of jurors.

Summoning Jurors

28. Mode of selecting jurors to form panel.


29. Service of the summons.
30. Delivery of panel.
31. Composition of jury in certain cases.
32. Challenges to the array.
33. Number of jury. Continuance of trial where juror dies or
becomes incapable.
34. Duties of members of police force.
35. Transfer of causes from one court to another.

Empanelling the Jury

36. Mode of choosing jury.


37. Pieces of card etc. kept apart till discharge of jury.
38. Peremptory challenges.
39. Challenges for cause.
40. Default of jurors.
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 5

SECTION
41. Trial of successive issues by the same jury.
42. Counting and swearing jurors.

Fees of Jurors

43. Payment of jurors.

Supplemental Provisions

44. View by jury of place or persons, connected with cause.


45. Discharge of jurors from attendance.
46. (1) Partiality of Registrar.
(3) Failure to comply with order.
(4) Definition of “Registrar” in this Title.
47. Procedure as to juries in matters not provided for.

PART II

PROCEEDINGS BEFORE A MAGISTRATE

TITLE 3 — ENFORCEMENT APPEARANCE OF ACCUSED PERSON

48. When magistrate may compel appearance before him of


accused person.
49. Magistrate may inquire into suspected offence; Fourth
Schedule.

Search Warrant

50. When search warrant may be issued, and proceedings there-


under.

Complaint or Information

51. Reception of complaint or information.

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

6 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

Summons to Accused Persons


SECTION
52. (1) Issue, contents and service of summons.
(5) Proof of service of process by bailiff or constable.

Warrant for Apprehension of Accused Person

53. Issue of warrant of apprehension in first instance.


54. Power of justice of the peace to issue warrant in certain cases.
55. Magistrate may direct security to be taken.

TITLE 4—PROCEEDINGS ON APPEARANCE OF ACCUSED PERSON

56. Disposal of person apprehended upon warrant.


57. Offence committed out of jurisdiction of investigating
magistrate.
58. Director of Public Prosecutions may order a change of venue in
the case of a preliminary inquiry.

Irregularity

59. Irregularity in summons, warrant, service or arrest.

Witnesses

60. Application of law with respect to witnesses.


61. (1) Local inspection and examination of injured person.
(2) Penalty for non-compliance with order to examine.

Proceedings at Preliminary Inquiry

62. General discretionary powers of magistrate with respect to


mode of holding inquiry.
63. Restriction on publication of report of preliminary inquiry.
64. Proceedings in camera.
65. Taking of evidence for prosecution.
66. Charging accused person.
67. Taking evidence for defence.
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 7

SECTION
68. Marking exhibits.
69. Deposition of witness not able to attend through illness.

Discharge

70. Discharge of accused person.


71. (1) Costs and expenses of frivolous or vexatious complaint or
information.
(3) Appeal.

Committal for Trial

72. Committal of accused person for trial.


73. Power of Director of Public Prosecutions to remit case for
committal.
74. Copy of depositions for accused person.
75. Binding over to give evidence.

TITLE 5 - PROCEEDINGS SUBSEQUENT TO COMMITTAL


OF ACCUSED PERSON

76. Transmission of documents relating to cause.


77. Deposition of witness after committal of accused person.
78. Power to Director of Public Prosecutions to remit cause for
further inquiry.
79. Power to Director of Public Prosecutions to remit cause to be
dealt with summarily.
80. Further provisions as to remission of case.
81. Conditions under which witnesses at a preliminary inquiry need
not be called at the trial.

TITLE 6—BAIL

82. Right of accused person to bail.


(a) Continuous bail.
(b) Saving.
83. Bailing of accused on adjournment of inquiry.

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

8 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

SECTION
84. Committal of accused person to prison for safe custody pending
preliminary inquiry.
85. Bailing accused person on committal for trial.
86. Conveying accused person to prison after committal for trial.
87. Bailing accused person after committal for trial.
88. Power of the Court or judge to bail accused person.
89. Apprehension of accused person on bail but about to abscond.
90. (1) Amount of bail.
(3) Bailing infant.

PART III

PROCEEDINGS IN THE COURT

TITLE 7—MODE OF TRIAL

91. General mode of trial.


92. Trial at bar.
93. Saving of right of Director of Public Prosecutions to file
information for misdemeanour.
94. Meaning of “the rules”.
95. Rule Committee.
96. Presentation and sufficiency of indictments.
97. Joinder of charges in the same indictment.
99. Orders for amendment of indictment, separate trial and post-
ponement of trial.
99. Saving.

TITLE 8—PLEADINGS

Indictment

100. Variances and amendments.


101. When full offence charged and attempt proved.
102. Case of attempt charged—full offence proved.
103. Full offence charged—part proved.
104. Misdemeanour charged—felony proved.
105. Embezzlement charged—larceny proved and vice versa.
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 9

SECTION
106. Joinder of counts and proceedings thereon.
107. Objection to substance of indictment.

Pleas

108. Special pleas allowed to be pleaded.


109. General effect of pleas of autrefois acquit and convict.
110. Effect where previous offence charged was without aggrava-
tion.
111. Use of depositions on former trial on trial of pleas.
112. Plea of justification in case of libel.
113. Application of previous provisions to criminal information.

TITLE 9 - PROCEEDINGS PRELIMINARY TO TRIAL

114. Institution of proceedings by Director of Public Prosecutions.


115. Right of Director of Public Prosecutions to enter nolle prosequi.
116. Filing and service of copy of indictment.
117. Bench warrant where accused person does not appear.
118. Abolition of trial on coroner’s inquisition.
119. Change of venue and proceedings thereon.
120. Abolition of outlawry.

TITLE 10—WITNESSES

Attendance of Witness

121. Attendance of witness bound by recognizance to attend.


122. Writ of subpoena for witness.
123. Preparation and issue of writ.
124. Service of writ.
125. Warrant for apprehension of witness disobeying summons.
126. Warrant for apprehension of witness not attending on recogni-
zance.
127. Penalty for non-attendance of witness.
128. Warrant for apprehension of witness in first instance.
129. List of witnesses not required to be filed.

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

10 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

Examination of Witness
SECTION
130. Mode of dealing with witness refusing to be sworn or to give or
produce evidence.
131. Non-attendance of witness at adjourned trial.
132. Procedure with respect to witnesses where trial is postponed.

Remuneration of Witness

133. Remuneration and travelling expenses of witnesses.

TITLE 11—TRIAL

Records

134. Form and particulars of minutes of proceedings on trial.


135. Original record of proceedings.
136. Furnishing the Minister with copies of records.

Arraignment

137. Bringing prisoner up for arraignment.


138. Postponement of trial.
139. Arraignment of accused person.
140. Procedure on indictment containing count charging previous
conviction.
141. Proof of previous conviction.
142. Proof of previous trial on trial for perjury.

Plea

143. Abolition of pleas in abatement.


144. Pleading and refusal to plead.
145. Effect of plea of not guilty.
146. Recording plea.
147. Abolition of inquiry as to property or flight in treason.
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 11

Further Proceedings at Trial


SECTION
148. Case for the prosecution.
149. Case for the defence.
150. Right of reply.
151. Procedure where person is committed for trial through error.
152. Adjournment, or discharge of jury and postponement, of trial.
153. Recalling witness.
154. Summing up.
155. Consideration of verdict.
156. Retirement of jury for consideration of verdict.
157. Communication with jury while in retirement considering
verdict.
158. Accommodation of jury kept together or in retirement.
159. Number of jurors required to find verdict.
160. Delivery of verdict. Recording of verdict.
161. (1) Verdict of not guilty.
(2) Plea or verdict of guilty, motion in arrest of judgment and
sentence.
162. Motion in arrest of judgment.
163. Recording judgment.
164. Sentence of death.
165. Special provision for saving validity of verdict in cases of
larceny embezzlement and the like.
166. Abolition of attainder for forfeiture and escheat.
167. Sentence of death not to be passed on pregnant woman.
168. Procedure where women convicted of capital offence alleges
she is pregnant.
169. Where person convicted wishes other offences to be taken into
consideration.
170. Adjournment of trial.
171. Mode of dealing with jury on adjournment of trial.
172. Discharge of jury in certain special cases.
173. Effect on recognisance of postponement of trial.
174. Presence of accused person at trial.
175. Validity of proceedings on Sunday.
176. Publication of list of persons convicted.

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

12 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

Arraignment and Trial of Insane Persons


SECTION
177. Procedure where person indicted appears on arraignment, or
during trial, to be insane.
178. When accused found to be insane jury not to find verdict on
indictment.
179. Special verdict where accused person found guilty, but insane at
date of act or omission charged.
180. (1) Provision for custody of accused person found insane.
(2) Judge to report finding to the Minister.
PART IV

TITLE 12—EXECUTION OF SENTENCES

181. By whom sentences to be executed.

Imprisonment

182. Sentences of imprisonment.

Suffering Punishment

183. Effect of undergoing sentence for felony not punishable with


death.
184. Saving of powers of committal to reformatory.

Capital Punishment

185. (1) Place where judgment of death to be executed.


(2) Immateriality of time and place of execution mentioned in
judgment.
186. Persons to be present at execution.
187. Post mortem examination.
188. (1) Publication of certificate and declaration.
(2) Signing false certificate or declaration.
189. Saving as to non-compliance with directions.
190. Making of regulations.
191. General saving.
192. Commutation of sentence of death.
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 13

TITLE 13—MISCELLANEOUS MATTERS


SECTION
193. Mode of conducting case.

Ownership of Property

194. Mode of stating ownership of property of partners.


195. Mode of stating ownership of place of worship.
196. Mode of stating ownership of public property.
197. Criminal remedies of married woman against her husband and
others in respect of property.
198. Criminal liability of wife to husband.

Arrest

199. Summary apprehension of offender in certain cases.


200. Form and requisites of warrant of apprehension.
201. Execution of warrant.
202. Handcuffing person arrested.
203. Police station to be lock-up.

Seizure and Restitution of Property

204. (1) Seizure of property the proceeds of indictable offence.


(2) Seizure of things intended to be used in commission of
indictable offence.
(3) Enforcement of order of seizure.
205. Report of property found upon person apprehended.
206. Application of money found upon person apprehended.
207. Restitution of property in case of conviction.
208. Restitution of stolen property by purchaser thereof.

Enforcing Recognisance

209. (1) Preparation of list of persons making default on recogni-


sances.
(3) Issue of writ of execution.
(4) Apprehension and detention of person making default,
where recognisance is unsatisfied.

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

14 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

SECTION
(5) Failure of the person, when released, to appear at next sitting
of the Court.

Fines, Forfeitures and Contempts

210. Proceedings against person fined by the Court.

Pardon

211. Effect of conditional pardon to convicted felon.


212. Power of the Court to grant conditional pardon.
213. Effect of pardon.
214. Recording pardon or warrant of commutation.
215. Power of President to remit fine, or to release offender
imprisoned for non-payment thereof.
216. Effect of acquiescence in remission.

Error and some other matters

217. Prohibition of proceeding in error.


218. Remuneration of interpreter.
219. Payment of costs by convicted person.
220. Matters excepted from the Act.
221. Procedure on charge of or trial for treason.
222. Use of forms.
223. Power to amend Third and Sixth Schedules.

FIRST SCHEDULE—Persons exempted from service as Jurors.


SECOND SCHEDULE—Forms relating to Juries and Jurors.
THIRD SCHEDULE—Remuneration of Jurors.
FOURTH SCHEDULE—Forms for use in Proceedings relating to
Indictable offences.
FIFTH SCHEDULE—Rules.
SIXTH SCHEDULE—Remuneration of Witnesses.
SEVENTH SCHEDULE—Form of Return of Service of Notice on a
Person committed for Trial or a Witness.

___________
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 15

CHAPTER 10:01 1929 Ed.


c. 18
CRIMINAL LAW (PROCEDURE) ACT 1953 Ed.
c. 11
_____________
[1ST MARCH, 1894]

An Act to consolidate and amend the Laws relating to Procedure 19 of 1893


with respect to Indictable Offences.

PRELIMINARY

1. This Act may be cited as the Criminal Law (Procedure) Act. Short title.

2. In this Act— Interpretation


[O. 4/1974]
“child” means a person who, in the opinion of the magistrate or of the
Court, is under the age of fourteen years;

“the Court” means the High Court acting in the exercise of its criminal
jurisdiction;

“guardian”, in relation to a child, means the parent or other lawful


guardian of the child, and includes any person, being of or above
the age of eighteen years, who, in the opinion of the magistrate or
of the Court, has for the time being the actual custody, control, or
charge of the child;

“indictable offence” means any offence punishable on indictment


before the Court;

“indictment” includes any criminal information triable by a jury;

“a judge” or “the judge” means a judge of the Court sitting with or


without a jury or in chambers, as the case may be;

“keeper”, when used in relation to a prison, includes the superintendent


or other chief resident officer of a prison;

L.R.O. 3/1998
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16 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

“the marshal” means the Registrar, and includes any person lawfully
discharging the functions of a marshal in reference to any cause or
matter in the Court;

“prison” includes any lock-up house, police cell, or other duly


authorised place of detention for persons in custody;

“the Registrar” means the Registrar of the Supreme Court, and


includes any person lawfully discharging the functions of the
Registrar in reference to any cause or matter in the Court;

“the registry” means the registry of the Supreme Court.

Application of 3. This Act shall extend and apply to all proceedings in respect of
the Act. indictable offences, unless the contrary is expressly provided by any
written law relating thereto.

PART I

GENERAL PROVISIONS

TITLE 1—BUSINESS OF THE COURT

Appointment 4. (1) At every sitting of the Court, the Director of Public


of causes to be Prosecutions shall appoint the number of causes to be tried on each day
tried on each
of the sitting, and shall cause a list of the causes, and of the days on
day of the
sitting. which he appoints them to be tried, to be transmitted to the Registrar
three days at least before the first day of the sitting of the Court.

(2) Immediately on receiving the list, the Registrar shall cause


it to be published in the Gazette and in one or more newspapers of
Guyana, and he shall also cause a copy of the list to be delivered to the
judge or judges who is or are to preside at the sitting, and a copy to be
put up on or near the door of the court hall in which the sitting is to be
held.
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 17

(3) The Registrar shall also immediately transmit by telegraph


or telephone, if possible, the particulars of the list to the clerk of every
magistrate’s court in the county in which the sitting is to be held and to
the police constable in charge of every police station in that county;
and it shall be the duty of that clerk or constable, immediately on
receiving the particulars, to cause a copy of the list to be posted up in
some conspicuous place at every court hall in his district or at the
police station under his charge, as the case may be.

5. Every cause so appointed to be tried on a particular day shall not Time of trial
be tried before that day, but shall, if not postponed to the next sitting of of causes.
[40 of 1961]
the Court, be tried on that day, or on one of the succeeding days of the
sitting that may be convenient.

6. Nothing in section 4 or 5 shall be construed to prevent the Adding cause


Director of Public Prosecutions from adding any cause to the list after after transmis-
sion of list.
it has been transmitted to the Registrar:

Provided that if an addition is made at any time less than three days
before the first day of the sitting of the Court, or at any time during the
said sitting of the Court, the accused person shall be entitled to apply
to the Court for a postponement of the trial to another sitting of the
Court on the ground that he has not had sufficient time to prepare his
defence.

7. The Director of Public Prosecutions shall, on the first day of Calendar of


every sitting of the Court, deliver to the Court a list of all persons, causes for
trial.
whether in custody or not, against whom any process has been
commenced for any indictable offences triable at that sitting,
specifying the names of all of them, the nature of the offences with
which they are respectively charged, the time at which each offence is
alleged to have been committed, and the state of the proceedings in
each case.

8. (1) The Director of Public Prosecutions may appoint any State


barrister-at-law to prosecute on behalf of the State at any sitting of the prosecutors.
[O. 68/1961]
Court or on any day or days of the sitting.

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

18 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

(2) It shall not be necessary for any person so appointed to


produce any commission or other proof of his having been so
appointed.

(3) Any person so appointed shall, in relation to the business


before the Court during the subsistence of his appointment, have all the
powers and perform all the duties of the Director of Public
Prosecutions, but subject to any express directions of the Director of
Public Prosecutions in that behalf.

Jurisdiction 9. (1) All plantations, estates, and other premises situated, lying,
with respect to and being between the Parika creek and the Boerasirie creek shall, for
counties. all purposes connected with the administration of justice by the Court,
be deemed and taken to be within the county of Demerara and not
within the county of Essequibo.

(2) Where persons committed for trial from any place or district
in any county can, on account of difficulty of communication or
expense or otherwise, be more conveniently tried at a sitting of the
Court other than a sitting for the county in which that place or district
is situate, the Chief Justice may, by order, direct that all persons
committed for trial from that place or district shall be committed for
trial to, and shall be tried at, the first-mentioned sitting.

(3) While the order remains in force, it shall be the duty of all
persons concerned to obey its directions.

Bringing of 10. (l) The keeper of the prison of the county in which any sitting
prisoners of the Court is held shall, by himself or by his deputy, be in attendance
before the
Court for trial.
at the sitting at all times whilst the Court is sitting, and shall bring each
prisoner awaiting trial before the Court when his case is called for trial,
and during the continuance of the trial shall have him under his charge
and custody, and from time to time remand him to prison by
permission or order of the Court during the progress of the trial or on
any adjournment thereof.

(2) The Commissioner of Police shall afford any assistance


necessary to enable the keeper to comply with the requirements of this
section.
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 19

11. It shall not hereafter be necessary for any proclamation against Discontinu-
vice and immorality to be read at the commencement of any sitting of ance of
the Court. proclamation
against vice.

Goal Delivery

12. The prisons which shall be delivered at the respective sittings of Prisons to be
the Court held in and for the several counties of Guyana shall be the delivered at
respective county prisons, that is to say, the Georgetown prison and the sittings of the
Court.
New Amsterdam prison (or any other prisons from time to time
substituted by lawful authority for them respectively), and no other.

13. (1) The keeper of each of the county prisons shall, before the Bringing of
end of every sitting of the Court held in the county in which the prison certain classes
of prisoners
is situate, deliver in open Court to the presiding judge a correct list of
before the
all persons in his custody upon any criminal charge who have not then Court for
been tried, or upon whom sentence has not then been passed, or who delivery.
have been committed in default of sureties to keep the peace or [20 of 1939]
otherwise, distinguishing as accurately as may be their names, ages,
and sexes, with the dates of their respective commitments and the
authority under which they were respectively committed.

(2) The keeper, on the days and at the times of the sitting, and in
the numbers directed by the Court shall bring and produce in open
court all the persons so in his custody as aforesaid.

14. If any person who, during any sitting of the Court, appears to be Right of
in actual custody awaiting his trial thereat, prays in open court, at any prisoner in
certain cases to
time during that sitting, to be then and there put upon his trial, the Court
be tried or
may, before the termination of the sitting, either- bailed.
[20 of 1939]
(a) If the jurors have not been discharged, proceed to his
trial; or
(b) discharge him upon bail to appear at the next ensuing
sitting of the Court for the same county, and to answer any
indictment which may then be preferred against him; or
(c) remand him for trial at the next ensuing sitting of the
Court for the same county, or otherwise, as the Court thinks
fit;

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

20 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

but if a prisoner, being in custody for the same offence during a second
sitting of the Court for the same county, at any time during that sitting,
in open court, prays to be then and there put upon his trial, the Court
shall, before the termination of the sitting, either proceed to his trial or
discharge him upon bail as aforesaid.

Prisoners 15. At the conclusion of every sitting of the Court, the Court shall
entitled to be discharge all prisoners not under sentence remaining in the prison of
discharged. the county in which the sitting is held, who, by the law of Guyana for
the time being in force, and, in default of that law, and so far as it does
not extend, by the law of England for the time being in force, would be
then entitled to their discharge upon gaol delivery, and also all other
accused persons committed for trial at the sitting and remaining
untried who, by the law aforesaid, would be entitled to that discharge;
and the Court may also discharge all prisoners remaining in that prison
in default of sureties to keep the peace, who, in the opinion of the Court,
ought to be so discharged.

Procedure of 16. Subject to this Act and any other statute for the time being in
the Court in force, the practice and procedure of the Court shall be, as nearly as
matters not
possible, the same as the practice and procedure for the time being in
provided for.
force in criminal causes and matters in the High Court of Justice and
the courts of assize created by commission of oyer and terminer and of
gaol delivery in England.

TITLE 2—LAW AND PRACTICE AS TO JURIES

Constitution of 17. Every jury for the trial and determination of a cause before the
jury. Court shall be constituted as hereinafter provided.

Abolition of 18. No alien, denizen, or other person charged with an indictable


jury de offence shall be entitled to be tried by a jury de mediatate linguae.
mediatate
linguae.
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 21

Qualification of Jurors and Jury Lists

19. (l) Save as otherwise provided in this Act and subject to this Qualification
section, every person residing in Guyana who is a citizen of Guyana of jurors.
[2 of 1948
and is not subject to any legal incapacity shall be qualified and liable to
57 of 1952
serve on a jury for the trial and determination of causes before the 22 of 1961
Court sitting in the county in which he resides— 4 of 1972]

(a) if he is in receipt of an income, salary or wage which


(together with any sum paid or allowed to him or on his
behalf for board or lodging or board or lodging supplied to
him or on his behalf as one of the terms of his employment)
amounts to a sum which is at the rate of not less than seven
hundred and fifty dollars per annum; or
(b) if he is the owner in his own right of immovable
property in the county in which he resides consisting of not
less than three acres of land; or
(c) if he is the owner in his own right of immovable
property in the county in which he resides of the value of not
less than one hundred and fifty dollars over and above the
amount of any registered encumbrance thereon or statutory
claim attached thereto, or of a house in the county in which
he resides of the value of not less than one hundred and fifty
dollars over and above the amount of any bill of sale or
registered encumbrance thereon or statutory claim attached
thereto; or
(d) if he is the lessee in his own right, under a lease or other
document in writing registered in the Deeds Registry or in
the Lands Department for an original term of three years or
more, of immovable property in the county in which he
resides consisting of not less than three acres of land; or
(e) if he is the lessee in his own right of immovable
property, or of a house, in the county in which he resides of
the annual rental of not less than fifty dollars under a lease in
writing, registered in the Deeds Registry or in the Lands
Department, for an original term of one year or more.

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

22 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

(2) Where two or more persons are owners, whether jointly or in


common, of immovable property, then for the purpose of subsection
(l)(b) each of such owners shall be regarded as qualified and liable
under that paragraph if the acreage of such immovable property is such
that when divided by the number of such owners the result is not less
than three acres.

(3) Where two or more persons are owners, whether jointly or in


common, of immovable property or of a house, then for the purpose of
subsection (l)(c), each of such owners shall be regarded as qualified
and liable under that paragraph if the value of such immovable
property or house, as the case may be, is such that when divided by the
number of such owners the result is not less than one hundred and fifty
dollars.

(4) Where two or more persons are lessees, whether jointly or in


common, of immovable property under a lease or other document for
an original term of three years or more, then for the purpose of
subsection (l)(d), each of such lessees shall be regarded as qualified
and liable under that paragraph if the acreage of such immovable
property is such that when divided by the number of such lessees the
result is not less than three acres.

(5) Where two or more persons are lessees, whether jointly or in


common, of immovable property or of a house under a lease or other
document for an original term of one year or upwards, then for the
purpose of subsection (l)(e) each of such lessees shall be regarded as
qualified and liable under that paragraph if the annual rental of such
immovable property or house, as the case may be, is such that when
divided by the number of such lessees the result is not less than fifty
dollars.

Disqualifica- 20. A person shall not be qualified or be liable to serve on juries


tion of certain who—
persons from
jury service.
[20 of 1939 (a) cannot speak, read and write English; or
22 of 1961 (b) is over sixty or under eighteen years of age; or
O. 4/1974] (c) has been convicted of any offence involving dishonesty
in respect of which he has undergone any term of
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 23

imprisonment or has been convicted of any offence in


respect of which he has undergone a term of imprisonment
exceeding six months, unless he has received a free pardon;
or
(d) is at the date of the trial for which a jury is being
empanelled a person in respect of whom a preliminary
inquiry into an indictable offence is pending or who has been
committed for trial; or
(e) is suffering, either at the date of the preparation or of the
revision of the jury list or at the date of a trial, from deafness,
dumbness, blindness, insanity or imbecility.

21. The persons described in the First Schedule shall be severally Exemption of
exempt, as therein specified, from being returned to serve and from certain
persons.
serving on juries, and their names shall not be inserted in any list of
First Schedule.
jurors or jurors’ book; but, save as aforesaid, no person otherwise
qualified, and not hereinbefore disqualified, to serve on juries, shall be
exempt from serving thereon.

22. No person whose name is in any jurors’ book as a juror shall be Disqualifica-
entitled to be excused from attendance on the ground of any tion or
disqualification or exemption, other than illness, not claimed by him or exemption to
be claimed on
before the revision of the list of jurors as hereinafter mentioned. revision of
jury list.

23.(1) Every person who, whether as principal or attorney or manager, Information to


has others in his employ in any county shall, on application made to Registrar for
preparation of
him at any time by the Registrar, furnish that officer with a list signed
lists.
by him of all those persons who are, to the best of his belief, qualified [2 of 1948
under this Act, to serve as jurors. 22 of 1961
24 of 1969
(2) Every mayor or chairman of a local authority and every 25 of 1973
6 of 1997]
chief executive officer (by whatever name called) of a local authority
shall, on that application, furnish a list of all persons qualified as jurors
within the area administered by the local authority as shown by the
valuation list or other records relating to the properties within the said
area.

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

24 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

(3) The district commissioner and every officer of police in any


county shall, on that application, furnish to the best of his ability any
information which he has or is able to obtain as to the qualifications as
jurors by property or otherwise, of all persons within their respective
districts or jurisdictions.

(4) Every government medical officer shall, on the application


of the Registrar or revising officer, offer to examine free of charge any
person within his district as to whose physical qualification to serve as
a juror any question has arisen, and, if that person consents, shall
furnish the Registrar with a certificate as to that qualification. In the
absence of any medical evidence to the contrary, a refusal to be
examined may be taken as conclusive of absence of qualification.

(5) The Registrar shall make any application under this section
in writing and may serve it by post.

(6) Any person having in his custody any record, plan or


information relating to valuation for the purposes of rating or town
taxes (including any valuation list and any appraisement, rate or
property assessment book) shall permit the Registrar to inspect the
same at any reasonable time.

(7) Every person aforesaid who fails to comply with the request
of the Registrar within a reasonable time shall be liable on summary
conviction to a fine of nineteen thousand five hundred dollars.

Publication of 24. (1) On or before the 7th August in every year, the Registrar shall
list by prepare and publish, in the Gazette in alphabetical order, a list of all
Registrar. persons residing within the counties of Demerara, Essequibo, and
Second
Schedule. Berbice, respectively, who are qualified and liable to serve as jurors in
Form 1. those counties respectively, with the forenames and surnames written
[2 of 1948 at full length, and the place of abode, the title, quality, calling, or
22 of 1961] business, and the nature of the qualification of each of them, and if the
qualification is in respect of immovable property, the situation of that
property and the nature of his interest therein:
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 25

Provided that, in preparing the list, the Registrar shall not include
therein the name of any person who for the time being resides more
than forty miles from the place where the sittings of the Court at which
he is liable to serve are held.

(2) The Registrar shall cause copies of every such list to be


posted on the doors of such post offices, police stations, court-houses,
government offices, town halls, village offices, churches, chapels, and
other conspicuous places in the county to which the list relates, as he
may deem necessary.

25. (1) The Chief Justice may from time to time appoint one or Revision of
more magistrates, or barristers-at-law, or solicitors of the Supreme lists.
[2 of 1948
Court, to be revising officers to sit at suitable places within any county
57 of 1952
for the purpose of revising the list for the county, and the Registrar 22 of 1961
shall, at the time of the publication of the list mentioned in the last 24 of 1969
preceding section, give notice in the Gazette of the date and places at 25 of 1973]
which the revising officers shall sit, but no sitting shall begin earlier
than the 12th August.

(2) Every copy of the list posted under section 24(2) shall
contain a notice by the Registrar of the dates and places at which the
revising officer for the county to which the list relates shall sit.

(3) At the sitting, every person claiming to be exempted or to be


added to the list, or to have any alteration made in his name or
description on the list, may appear and prove his case by oath or other
evidence to the satisfaction of the revising officer.

(4) The Registrar, the mayor and town clerk of Georgetown and
New Amsterdam respectively, the mayors and chief executive officers
(by whatever name called) of other towns established under section 33
of the Municipal and District Councils Act, the chairmen and chief
executive officers of councils of local government districts established
under the Municipal and District Councils Act, the chairmen of village c. 28:01
councils, district commissioners and officers of police, shall have the
right of audience and may on proper grounds lodge objections to the
inclusion or omission of any name and to the correctness of any
description.

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

26 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

(5) (a)The revising officer may insert on the list the name
of any person whom he considers should not have been
omitted, and may strike out the name of any person whom he
considers to be improperly included, and may correct any
error or omission whether of name, description, or
otherwise:

Provided that—

(i) except on the application of the person whose name or


description is dealt with, no inclusion, removal, or
alteration aforesaid, shall be made unless that person has
had two days’ notice in writing that application will be
made to the revising officer at the sitting; and
(ii) in the absence of notice, the revising officer shall
cause written notice to be given, fixing a suitable place and
date, not earlier than three days from the date of notice,
requiring him to show cause why the inclusion, removal,
or alteration should not be made.

(b) Subject to the provisions of this Act the revising


officer shall have all the powers of a registrar under
c. 19:08 regulation 27 of the National Registration (Residents)
Sub. Leg. Regulations.

(6) When the list has been duly revised the revising officer shall
sign it with his allowance thereof and transmit it to the Registrar on or
before the 26th August, and the Registrar shall thereupon cause notice
of all amendments to be published, on or before the 1st September, in
the Gazette, and shall thereupon correct his original list according to
each amendment.

(7) The Registrar shall cause copies of the notice of


amendments under subsection (6) to be posted on the doors of such
post offices, police stations, court-houses, government offices, town
halls, village offices, churches, chapels, and other conspicuous places
in the county to which the notice relates, as he may deem necessary.
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 27

(8) The Registrar shall keep the revised list of jurors for the
several counties and shall immediately after their allowance cause
them to be fairly and truly recorded in a book to be entitled “The
Demerara (or Berbice, or Essequibo) Jurors Book for the Judicial Year
,” as the case may be.

(9) The Registrar shall prefix to each name in the jurors’ books
its proper number, beginning the numbers from the first name and
continuing them in regular arithmetical series down to the last name.

(10) The Registrar shall, from time to time after the revision of
the list, regulate the jurors’ books by striking out the names of all jurors
above the age of sixty years, and the names of all jurors who have died
or departed from the counties aforesaid respectively.

26. An appeal shall lie from any decision of the revising officer to Appeal from
a Judge of the High Court in chambers: decision of
revising
officer.
Provided that an appeal shall not prevent or postpone the [2 of 1948]
allowance of the list by the revising officer, or invalidate any act done
thereafter in regard to the list, but if the decision of the High Court on
appeal necessitates any alteration of the list, the alteration shall be duly
made by the Registrar and shall take effect from the date thereof.

27. Every jurors’ book so prepared and regulated shall be taken to Juror’s book to
be a true record of all persons qualified and liable to serve on juries for be true record
of jurors.
the county to which it relates for the twelve months subsequent to the
1st September in each year:

Provided that each jurors’ book shall remain in force until the next
jurors’ book for the same county has been prepared.

Summoning Jurors

28. (l)(a) At a convenient time before any sitting of the Court, the Mode of
Registrar shall, in the presence of a Judge of the High Court, select selecting
from the jurors’ book of the county in which the sitting is to be held a jurors to form
panel.
[2 of 1948

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

28 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

57 of 1952 sufficient number of panels as the circumstances may require, each


14 of 1955 panel consisting of not less than thirty persons whose names are in that
18 of 1956
book.
22 of 1961
21 of 1968] (b) The numbers prefixed to the names in the jurors’ list for
the county shall be written, type-written, or printed, on
separate cards of uniform size and put into a box, whence,
after being shaken before the drawing of each card, such
number, being not less than thirty, as the Registrar may
deem sufficient, shall be drawn out, and the persons whose
names correspond to the numbers on the cards so drawn
shall form the panel.
(c) If any of the persons die, or be too ill to travel, or are not
found for service, other numbers shall be drawn in like
manner until the panel is completed:

Provided that—

(i) no person shall be summoned who resides more than


forty miles from the place where the sitting of the Court is to
be held;
(ii) any person who has been selected to form a panel shall
be exempt from service for two years;
(iii) if the number of persons on the jurors’ book for a
county who are liable to be selected as hereinbefore
provided is at any time insufficient to form a panel or panels
at any sitting of the Court, the Registrar may select from the
persons whose names are entered in the jurors’ book as
exempt under the preceding paragraph of this proviso any
number necessary to complete the panel or panels; and, in
making the selection, the Registrar shall take first the names
of those persons who have been longest exempt and shall
proceed in that order until the panel is complete;
(iv) a husband and wife shall not both be summoned to
serve at any sitting of the Court; and
(v) the number of women appearing on any panel of jurors
shall be in the same proportions, as near as may be, to the
number of men appearing thereon as the total number of
women is to the total number of men in the jurors’ book.
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 29

(2) When two or more persons in or belonging to any bank,


counting-house, mercantile establishment, store, shop, or cane
plantation, are liable to be selected as jurors at the same sitting of the
Court, the Registrar shall select one only of those persons at that sitting
for every five persons in or belonging to the bank or other
establishment or place aforesaid; and the other or others of them (if
any) shall be liable to be selected as jurors at the next or any subsequent
sitting of the Court for the same county, so that not more than one for
every five of the persons last mentioned shall be summoned at any one
sitting.

(3) As often as any juror is selected to serve, the Registrar shall


mark in the jurors’ book the date when he has been so selected.

(4) The persons so selected as aforesaid shall, subject to


subsection (5), be the jurors to serve for the trial of all issues at that
sitting of the Court for the county.

(5) The Court or a Judge may exempt or discharge any juror, or


any panel of jurors, from service or further service during the whole or
any part of a criminal session, and may direct the Registrar, if the Court
or Judge considers such a direction to be necessary, to select another
juror, or another panel of jurors, for service during the whole or the part
as aforesaid (as the case may be) of the criminal session.

(6) Every selection of jurors under this Act shall be made by or


in the presence of the Registrar in person, or in his absence, by or in the
presence of the chief or other senior clerk of his office.

29. (1) The Registrar shall not less than ten days before the first day Service of the
of any sitting of the Court, send to the Commissioner of Police, the summons.
Second
summonses to be served on the jurors for that sitting. Schedule.
Form 2.
(2) The Commissioner of Police shall cause the summonses to
be served by members of the police force on the persons selected to
serve as jurors seven days at least before the first day of the sitting by
delivering a summons in writing to each of them personally, or if he
cannot conveniently be encountered, by leaving it for him at his last or
most usual place of abode.

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

30 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

(3) The summoning officer shall make a true return of the


service, and shall attend at the sitting of the Court, and if necessary
verify the service on oath.

(4) Nothing in this Act shall be construed to prevent a police


officer from summoning additional jurors at any time selected by, or in
the presence of the Registrar in person, or chief or other senior clerk of
his office in person, for any sitting of the Court.

Delivery of 30. (1) The Registrar shall cause the names of the jurors who have
panel. been summoned to be fairly and truly copied in a panel, in alphabetical
order, from the jurors’ book, together with their places of abode and
other particulars required to be entered therein, and shall number the
names in arithmetical series from the first to the last.

(2) The Registrar shall thereupon cause the names of the jurors
to be written, printed, or stamped, on separate pieces of card or
parchment, or on balls, and shall place the said pieces of card, or
parchment, or balls, in a box to be provided for that purpose.

Composition 31. (1) A judge before whom a case is or may be heard may, at any
of jury in time, in his discretion, on an application made by or on behalf of the
certain cases.
prosecutor and the accused or either of them, or at his own instance,
[22 of 1961
40 of 1961] order that the jury shall be composed of men only.

(2) Written notice of an intention to make an application under


the preceding subsection shall be given by the party intending to make
the application to the other party and to the Registrar not later than
three days before the first day of the sitting of the Court, and where any
cause has been added to the list by virtue of section 6, written notice of
an intention to make an application aforesaid shall be given to the other
party and to the Registrar not later than four days after the date of
publication in the Gazette of a notice of the addition of any such cause
to the list.

(3) When a judge has ordered that a jury shall be composed of


men only, any piece of card or parchment, or ball drawn out of the box
under section 37 which bears the name or number of a woman of the
panel shall be set aside.
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 31

32. (1) Either the State or the accused person may challenge the Challenges to
array on the ground of partiality, fraud, or wilful misconduct, on the the array.
part of the Registrar or any officer of his department, but on no other Second
Schedule.
ground and the challenge shall be made in writing, stating that the Form 3.
Registrar or any officer of his department was partial, or was
fraudulent, or wilfully misconducted himself, as the case may be.

(2) If the partiality, fraud, or wilful misconduct, as the case may


be, is denied, the Court shall appoint any two indifferent persons to try
whether the alleged ground of challenge is true or not, and if the triers
find that the alleged ground of challenge is true in fact, the Court shall
direct a new panel to be returned at once or otherwise as it thinks fit.

(3) If the array is not challenged, or if the triers find against the
challenge, the Registrar shall proceed to impanel a jury, and to swear
the jurors in the manner hereinafter prescribed.

33. In every case the jury shall consist of twelve persons: Number of
jury.
Continuance
Provided that where in the course of a trial any juror dies or is
of trial where
discharged by the Court as being through illness incapable of juror dies or
continuing to act or for any other reason, the jury shall nevertheless, so becomes
long as the number of the jurors is not reduced below ten, be considered incapable.
as remaining for all the purposes of that trial properly constituted, and [21 of 1932]
the trial shall proceed and a verdict may be given accordingly.

34. (1) Any member of the police force may serve summonses on Duties of
jurors. members of
police force.
(2) All members of the police force shall be officers of the court
in respect of the several duties imposed upon them by this Act.

35. When two or more judges are sitting separately in any county, Transfer of
the Director of Public Prosecutions may transfer any cause from one causes from
court to another and shall in each case state to the presiding judge of the one court to
another.
court to which the case is to be transferred his reasons for so doing, but
shall not transfer a case to any judge without that judge’s consent.

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

32 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

Empanelling the Jury

Mode of 36. When any issue is to be tried, the Registrar shall place in a box
choosing jury. pieces of card or parchment of uniform size, or balls, marked with the
names or numbers of the panel and shall, after shaking the box, in open
court draw them out of the box one after another to the number required
to constitute a jury and shall call out in regular sequence the names or
numbers of the jurors on the pieces of card or parchment, or balls; and
if any of the persons whose names are so drawn do not appear, or are
challenged and set aside, then the further number required, until the
proper number of persons are drawn and appear and, after all just
causes of challenge allowed, remain as fair and indifferent; and the
proper number of persons so first drawn and appearing and approved
as indifferent, their names being marked in the panel and they being
sworn, shall be the jury to try the issue.

Pieces of card 37. The pieces of card or parchment, or the balls, containing the
etc. kept apart names or numbers of the persons so drawn and sworn, shall be kept
till discharge apart by themselves until the jury have delivered their verdict and the
of jury.
verdict has been recorded, or until the jury have otherwise been
discharged, and shall then be returned to the box and mixed with the
other pieces of card or parchment, or balls, then remaining undrawn,
and so as often and as long as any issue remains to be tried:

Provided that, if any issue comes on to be tried, before the jury in


any other issue have brought in their verdict or have been discharged,
the Registrar shall draw the proper number of the residue of pieces of
card or parchment, or balls, in manner aforesaid for the trial of the issue
so coming on to be tried.

Peremptory 38. On the trial of any indictment—


challenges.
[2 of 1948] (a) the Director of Public Prosecutions, the State Counsel
or any counsel appointed to prosecute on behalf of the State
may, without cause assigned, challenge three jurymen; and
(b) every person arraigned may, without any cause
assigned, challenge three jurymen.
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 33

39. (1) The State and every accused person shall be entitled to any Challenges for
number of challenges on any of the following grounds, that is to say— cause.
[2 of 1948]
(a) that any juror’s name does not appear in the jurors’
book:

Provided that no misnomer or misdescription in that book shall be


a ground of challenge, if it appears to the Court that the description
given therein sufficiently designates the person referred to; or

(b) that any juror is disqualified under section 20 or exempt


under section 21; or
(c) that any juror is not indifferent between the State and
the accused person.

(2) No other ground of challenge than those above-mentioned


shall be allowed, and no challenge under this section shall be allowed
except for one of those grounds on any trial.

(3)(a) If any challenge aforesaid is made, the Court may, in its Second
discretion, require the party challenging to put his challenge in writing. Schedule.
Form 4.

(b) The other party may deny that the ground of challenge
is true, or may, in the case of a challenge on the ground that
the juror has been convicted as hereinbefore mentioned,
allege that the juror challenged has received a free pardon.
(c) If the ground of challenge is that the juror’s name does
not appear in the jurors’ book, the issue shall be tried by the
Court on voire dire by the inspection of the jurors’ book, and
on any other evidence the Court thinks fit to receive, and
similarly also in the case of a challenge on the ground that
the juror cannot speak, read, and write English.

(4) If the ground of challenge is any other than as last aforesaid,


then two persons present whom the Court may appoint for that
purpose, shall be sworn to try whether the juror challenged is
disqualified under section 20, or is exempt under section 21, or stands
indifferent between the State and the accused person, as the case may
be, and that trial may be held before the judge in chambers.

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

34 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

(5) If the Court or the triers find against the challenge, the juror
shall be sworn, but if the Court or the triers find for the challenge, the
juror shall not be sworn, and if, after what the Court considers a
reasonable time, the triers are unable to agree, the Court may discharge
them from giving a verdict and direct other persons to be sworn in their
place, or may give any other directions it thinks fit.

Default of 40. (1) Where a full jury does not appear or where, after appearance
jurors. of a full jury, by reason of challenges or otherwise, there is likely to be
[14 of 1955]
a default of jurors the court, on request made by the State, shall
command the Registrar to name and appoint, as often as required, so
many of other persons qualified to act as jurors then present as will
make up a full jury, and the Registrar shall, at the command of the
court, return those persons duly qualified who are present or can be
found to serve on that jury, and shall add their names to the panel
returned by him; and the State and the accused person shall in that case
have their respective challenges to the jurors so added, and the court
shall proceed to the trial of every issue in the same manner as if all of
them had been returned by the Registrar in the original panel.

(2) Where two or more panels are returned, the Registrar may,
on a tales being awarded, return a juror summoned on any one panel as
a talesman to serve with the jurors returned on any other panel.

Trial of 41. If no objection is made by either party, the Court may try an
successive issue with the same jury who have previously tried, or been drawn to
issues by the
try, another issue, without their numbers being returned to the box and
same jury.
redrawn, or to order the name of any person on the jury justly
challenged, or excused by the Court, to be set aside, and another
number to be drawn from the box in lieu thereof.

Counting and 42. (1) As soon as the jury is chosen the jurors shall be counted in
swearing the box by the Registrar, who shall at once proceed to swear them; but
jurors. if any juror refuses, or is unwilling from alleged conscientious
Second
Schedule. motives, to be sworn, the Court may, on being satisfied of the sincerity
Form 5. of the objection, allow him to make a solemn affirmation.
Form 6.
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 35

(2) That affirmation shall be of the same force and effect as if


the person affirming had taken an oath in the usual form, and shall, if
untrue, entail the same penalties as are or shall be provided against
persons guilty of perjury.

(3) Whenever, in any legal or other proceeding, it is necessary


or usual to state or allege that jurors have been sworn, it shall not be
necessary to specify that any particular juror has made affirmation
instead of oath, but it shall be sufficient to state or allege generally that
the jurors have been sworn.

(4) After they have been sworn, the jurors shall, by a majority of
voices to be taken privately by the Registrar, elect one of their number
to be their foreman.

Fees of Jurors

43. (1) Every person who has been summoned to attend, and Payment of
actually attends, any sitting of the Court as a juror, shall be entitled at jurors.
[20 of 1939
the close of the sitting or earlier and for such periods (being not less
2 of 1948
than one week in any instance) as the Registrar may approve and after 22 of 1961
his account has been duly taxed by the Registrar to the sum mentioned 21 of 1968]
in the Third Schedule. Third
Schedule.
(2) On presentation of the taxed account to the officer for the
time being directed by the Registrar, it shall be paid out of moneys
provided by Parliament to defray the expenses of the administration of
justice.

(3) Except with the approval of the Registrar, no claim made by


a juror for any sum aforesaid, shall be entertained if it is made later than
one month after the last day of the sitting of the Court in respect of
which it is made.

Supplemental Provisions

44. (1) Where in any case it is made to appear to the Court or a judge View by jury
that it will be for the interests of justice that the jury who are to try or of place or
person,
are trying the issue in the cause should have a view of any place,

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

36 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

connected with person, or thing connected with the cause, the Court or judge may
cause. direct that view to be had in the manner, and upon the terms and
conditions, to the Court or judge seeming proper.

(2) When a view is directed to be had, the Court or judge shall


give any directions seeming requisite for the purpose of preventing
undue communication with the jurors:

Provided that no breach of any of those directions shall affect the


validity of the proceedings, unless the Court otherwise orders.

Discharge of 45. The Court may at any time discharge any person summoned as
jurors from a juror from further attendance on the Court, or may excuse him from
attendance. attendance for any period during the sitting of the Court, or, for any
reason which it deems sufficient, may direct any juror, at any stage
before the accused is arraigned, to stand aside until the rest of the panel
has been called.

Partiality of 46. (1) If the Registrar in any way acts partially in regulating any
Registrar, jurors’ book, or in selecting and summoning any jurors, he shall be
liable to a fine of one thousand ninety-seven hundred dollars, to be
recovered in the High Court by any person who may inform and bring
an action therefor, with full costs of suit.

(2) One-half of the sum, when recovered, shall belong to the


informer, and the other half shall be paid to the Accountant General for
the public use.

Failure to (3) Any person failing without reasonable cause within the time
comply with prescribed, or, if no time is prescribed, then within a reasonable time,
order.
to comply with any application order or direction authorised by this
Act shall be liable to a fine of nineteen thousand five hundred dollars.

Definition of (4) In this Title “Registrar” shall be deemed to include the


“Registrar” in Registrar as already defined in this Act, and any marshal, and any
this Title.
officer of the Court or the registry thereof duly authorised in writing by
the Registrar or by a sworn clerk or assistant sworn clerk.
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 37

47. Subject to this Act and any other written law for the time being Procedure as
in force, the practice and procedure relating to juries on the trial of to juries in
indictable offences shall be as nearly as possible in accordance with the matters not
provided for.
practice and procedure in the like case of the courts in England
mentioned in section 16.

PART II

PROCEEDINGS BEFORE A MAGISTRATE

TITLE 3—ENFORCING APPEARANCE OF ACCUSED PERSON

48. Every magistrate may issue a summons or warrant as When


hereinafter mentioned to compel the appearance of an accused person magistrate may
compel
before him for the purpose of preliminary inquiry, in any of the
appearance
following cases: before him of
accused
(a) if the person is accused of having committed in any person.
place whatever an indictable offence triable in Guyana, and
is, or is suspected to be, within the limits in which the
magistrate has jurisdiction, or resides or is suspected to
reside within those limits; or
(b) if he, wherever he may be, is accused of having
committed an indictable offence within those limits, or on
any journey during any part of which he has passed through
them; or
(c) if he is alleged to have anywhere unlawfully received
property which was so unlawfully obtained within those
limits as to render him liable for an indictable offence.

49. (1) Any magistrate who has reason to believe that any Magistrate
indictable offence has been committed within the limits of his may inquire
into suspected
jurisdiction for which the offender might, according to any statute for
offence.
the time being in force, be arrested without warrant, or that there is
reasonable ground for inquiring whether that offence has been
committed within those limits, or, in either case, that there is
reasonable ground for inquiring by whom the suspected offence has
Fourth
been committed, may (whether any particular person is charged or not) Schedule.
summon to appear before him any person whom he has reason to Form 4.

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LAWS OF GUYANA

38 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

Form 13. believe to be capable of giving material evidence concerning the


offence, and may examine the person upon oath concerning the
offence, and, if he sees cause, bind the person by recognisance to attend
and give evidence, if called upon by any magistrate or by the court, at
any time within the twelve months then next ensuing, unless the person
can show some reasonable excuse to the contrary.

(2) In case any person so summoned neglects to attend, or


refuses without lawful excuse to take the oath, or, having taken it, to
answer any question concerning the offence then put to him, or to enter
into the recognisance aforesaid, he may be dealt with in the same
manner as a witness may be dealt with who neglects or refuses to attend
or give evidence, or to be bound by recognisance to do so, after having
been served with a summons for that purpose.

Search Warrant

When search 50. (1) Any magistrate who is satisfied by proof upon oath, that
warrant may there is reasonable ground for believing that there is, in any building,
be issued, and
ship, carriage, box, receptacle, or place—
proceedings
thereunder.
(a) anything upon or in respect of which any indictable
offence has been or is suspected to have been committed for
which, according to any written law for the time being in
force, the offender may be arrested without warrant; or
(b) anything which there is reasonable ground for
believing will afford evidence as to the commission of that
offence; or
(c) anything which there is reasonable ground for
believing is intended to be used for the purpose of
Fourth committing any indictable offence against the person for
Schedule. which, according to any written law for the time being in
Form 18. force, the offender may be arrested without warrant,

may at any time issue a warrant under his hand authorising some police
or other constable named therein to search that building, ship, carriage,
box, receptacle, or place for the thing, and to seize and take it before the
magistrate issuing the warrant, or some other magistrate, to be by him
dealt with according to law.
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 39

(2) Every search warrant may be issued and executed on a


Sunday, and shall be executed between the hours of five o’clock in the
morning and eight o’clock at night:

Provided that the magistrate, in his discretion, may by the warrant


authorise the constable to execute it at any hour.

(3) When the thing is seized and brought before a magistrate, he


may detain it or cause it to be detained, taking reasonable care that it is
preserved until the conclusion of the inquiry; and, if any person is
committed for trial, he may order it further to be detained for the
purpose of evidence on the trial, but if no person is committed the
magistrate shall direct the thing to be restored to the person from whom
it was taken, except in the cases hereafter in this section mentioned,
unless he is authorised or required by law to dispose of it otherwise.

(4) If, under any warrant aforesaid, there is brought before any
magistrate any forged bank note, bank note paper, instrument or other
thing, the possession of which, in the absence of lawful excuse, is an
indictable offence according to any written law for the time being in
force, the court if the person is committed for trial, or if there is no
commitment for trial the magistrate, may cause it to be defaced or
destroyed.

(5) If, under any warrant aforesaid, there is brought before a


magistrate any counterfeit coin or other thing, the possession of which,
with knowledge of its nature and without lawful excuse, is an
indictable offence according to any written law for the time being in
force, it shall be delivered up to the Commissioner of Police, or to any
person authorised by him to receive it, as soon as it has been produced
in evidence, or as soon as it appears that it will not be required to be so
produced.

(6) If the thing to be searched for is gunpowder, or any other


explosive or dangerous or noxious substance or thing, the person
making the search shall have the same powers and protections as are
given by any written law for the time being in force to any person
lawfully authorised to search for that substance or thing, and the thing

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40 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

itself shall be disposed of in the same manner as directed by that


written law, or, in default of that direction, as ordered by the
Commissioner of Police.

Complaint or Information

Reception of 51. Upon any complaint or information given to a magistrate that an


complaint or indictable offence has been committed by any person whose
information. appearance he has power to compel, the magistrate shall consider the
Fourth
Schedule.
allegations of the complainant or informant, and, if he is of opinion that
Form 1. a case for so doing is made out, he shall issue a summons or warrant,
as the case may be, in the manner hereinafter mentioned; and he shall
not refuse to issue the summons or warrant only because the alleged
offence is one for which an offender may be arrested without warrant.

Summons to Accused Persons

Issue, contents 52. (1) The magistrate may issue a summons although there is not
and service of any complaint or information in writing or upon oath.
summons.
Fourth
Schedule. (2) The summons shall be directed to the accused person, and
Forms 5 and 6. shall require him to appear at a certain time and place to be therein
[33 of 1955] mentioned.

(3) The summons shall not be signed in blank.

(4) The summons shall be served by a police or other constable


upon the accused person, either by delivering it to him personally, or,
if he cannot, with the exercise of reasonable diligence, be encountered,
by leaving it with some person for him at his last or most usual place
of abode.

Proof of (5) Where it becomes necessary to prove the service of any


service of summons, notice, order or other process whatsoever issued under this
process by
Act which has been served by a bailiff or constable a return of service
bailiff or
constable. in Form 6 in the Fourth Schedule, purporting to be signed by the bailiff
[51 of 1932] or constable, shall be received in all courts as prima facie evidence of
the facts stated in the return without proof of the signature or official
character of the bailiff or constable.
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Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 41

Warrant for Apprehension of Accused Person

53. (1) If there is an information in writing and upon oath, the Issue of
magistrate may, if he is of opinion that a case for so doing is made out, warrant of
apprehension
issue a warrant for the apprehension of the accused person.
in first
instance.
(2) The fact that a summons has been issued shall not prevent Fourth
any magistrate from issuing that warrant at any time before or after the Schedule.
time mentioned in the summons for the appearance of the accused Form 7.
person; and where the service of the summons for the appearance of the
accused person has been proved and he makes no appearance, or where
it appears that the summons cannot be served, the warrant may issue.

(3) The magistrate who would have heard the charge if the
person summoned had appeared may issue the warrant, on information
in writing and upon oath taken either before himself or before another
magistrate or any justice of the peace, either before or after the
summons was issued.

54. In any case where, from the absence from any place of a Power of
magistrate, or from any other cause, it is not practicable to make justice of the
immediate application to a magistrate for the issue of a search warrant peace to issue
warrant in
or of a warrant for the apprehension of an accused person, and the ends certain cases.
of justice would be likely to be defeated by the delay required for the
making of the application to a magistrate, any justice of the peace may
and shall take the necessary information, and, if he is of opinion that a
case for so doing is made out, issue the warrant in the same manner as
a magistrate could do; but all subsequent proceedings in the case shall
be taken before a magistrate.

55. (1) Every magistrate issuing a warrant under section 53 for the Magistrate
arrest of any person in respect of any offence other than murder or may direct
treason shall, if in his opinion such person should be admitted to bail on security to be
taken.
his arrest, by endorsement on the warrant direct that if such person [22 of 1961]
executes a bond with sufficient sureties for his attendance before a
magistrate at a specified time and thereafter until otherwise directed by
the magistrate, the officer in charge of the police station to which such
person is brought on his arrest shall take such security and release such
person from custody.

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42 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

(2) The endorsement shall state—

(a) the number of sureties;


(b) the amount in which they and the person for whose
arrest the warrant is issued are to be respectively bound; and
(c) the time at which he is to attend before the magistrate.

(3) The officer in charge of any police station to which any such
person is brought on his arrest shall comply with the directions
endorsed on the warrant of arrest and whenever security is taken under
this section he shall forward the bond to the magistrate.

TITLE 4—PROCEEDINGS ON APPEARANCE OF ACCUSED PERSON

Disposal of 56. When any person is apprehended upon a warrant he shall be


person brought before a magistrate as soon after he is so arrested as
apprehended
practicable, and the magistrate shall either proceed with the
upon warrant.
preliminary inquiry or postpone it to a future time, in which latter case
he shall either commit the accused person to prison, or admit him to
bail, or permit him to be at large on his own recognisance, according to
the provisions hereinafter contained.

Offence 57. (1) If an accused person is brought before a magistrate charged


committed out with an offence committed without the limits of his jurisdiction, he
of jurisdiction
may, after hearing both sides, order the accused person, at any stage of
of investigat-
ing magistrate. the inquiry, to be taken by a police or other constable before the
magistrate having jurisdiction in the place where the offence was
committed.

Fourth (2) The magistrate so ordering shall give a warrant for that
Schedule. purpose to a police or other constable, and shall deliver to the constable
Form 16.
the information, depositions, and recognisances, if any, taken in the
cause, to be delivered to the magistrate before whom the accused
person is to be taken, and the information, depositions, and
recognisances shall be treated to all intents as if they had been taken by
the last-mentioned magistrate.
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Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 43

58. (l) Where in the opinion of the Director of Public Prosecutions Director of
by reason of the difficulty of communication it is expedient that a Public
Prosecutions
preliminary inquiry should be held by a magistrate of a district other
may order a
than the magistrate of the district having jurisdiction in the matter he change of
may by order under his hand transfer the holding of the preliminary venue in the
inquiry to the magistrate of such other district. case of a
preliminary
inquiry.
(2) The Director of Public Prosecutions on the making of an [21 of 1932]
order as aforesaid shall cause to be sent the order to the magistrate of
the district to whom the preliminary inquiry is transferred and a copy
to the magistrate from whom it is transferred. On receipt of the order
the first-mentioned magistrate shall have full power and jurisdiction to
proceed and hold the inquiry, and shall have and may exercise the same
powers, authorities and jurisdiction as if the case were one within the
limits of his jurisdiction.

(3) The last-mentioned magistrate on receipt of the copy of the


order shall order the accused person to be taken by a police or other
constable before the magistrate to whom the holding of the inquiry is
transferred and shall give a warrant for that purpose to a police or other
constable, and shall deliver to the constable the information,
depositions, and recognisances, if any, taken in the cause, to be
delivered to the magistrate before whom the accused person is to be
taken, and the information, depositions, and recognisances shall be
treated to all intents as if they had been taken by such magistrate.

(4) The magistrate if in pursuance of section 72 he commits the


accused person for trial, shall commit him to the court to which he
would have been liable to be committed by the magistrate from whom
the holding of the preliminary inquiry has been transferred.

Irregularity

59. (1) No irregularity or defect in the substance or form of the Irregularity in


warrant, and no variance between the charge contained in the warrant summons,
warrant,
and the charge contained in the information, or between either and the
service or
evidence adduced on the part of the prosecution at the preliminary arrest.
inquiry, shall affect the validity of any proceeding at or subsequent to
the hearing.

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44 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

(2) When any accused person is before a magistrate, whether


voluntarily or upon summons, or after being apprehended with or
without warrant, or while in custody for the same or any other offence,
the preliminary inquiry may be held notwithstanding any irregularity,
illegality, defect, or error in the summons or warrant, or the issuing,
service, or execution thereof, and notwithstanding the want of any
information upon oath, or any defect in the information or any
irregularity or illegality in the arrest or custody of the accused person:

Provided that—

(a) the magistrate, if he thinks that the ends of justice


require it, may adjourn the hearing of the cause, at the
request of the accused person, to some future day, and in the
meantime may remand the accused person or admit him to
bail; and
(b) upon the adjournment, the accused person shall not be
committed to prison unless, before his committal, an
information in writing and upon oath has been taken.

Witnesses

Application of 60. Subject to this Act, the provisions of law for the time being in
law with force with respect to witnesses on the hearing of a complaint for an
respect to
offence punishable on summary conviction in a magistrate’s court
witnesses.
Fourth shall, mutatis mutandis, apply to witnesses on the holding of a
Schedule. preliminary inquiry before a magistrate in respect of an indictable
Form 5. offence, with the addition that any of those witnesses shall be liable to
Form 7. be dealt with as hereinafter provided for refusing, without reasonable
excuse, to sign his deposition or to enter into a recognisance.

Local 61. (1) It shall be the duty of the magistrate holding any preliminary
inspection and inquiry to make or cause to be made any local inspection the
examination of circumstances of the case require; and, in any case of serious injury to
injured person.
[6 of 1997] the person, to cause the body of the person injured to be examined by
some duly qualified medical practitioner, if one can be had, and, if not,
then by the most competent person that can be obtained, and the
deposition of the medical practitioner or other person shall afterwards,
if necessary, be taken.
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 45

(2) Every medical practitioner or other person aforesaid who Penalty for
refuses or neglects, without reasonable excuse, to comply with any non-compli-
ance with
order or direction of a magistrate given under this section shall be
order to
liable to a fine of nine thousand seven hundred and fifty dollars. examine.

Proceedings at Preliminary Inquiry

62. The magistrate holding a preliminary inquiry may, in his General


discretion— discretionary
powers of
magistrate
(a) give or refuse permission to the prosecutor to address with respect to
him in support of the charge, either by way of opening or mode of
summing up the case, or by way of reply upon any evidence holding
produced by the accused person; inquiry.
(b) receive further evidence on the part of the prosecutor,
after hearing any evidence given on behalf of the accused
person;
(c) adjourn the hearing of the inquiry from time to time and
change the place of hearing, if, from the absence of a
witness, the inability of a witness who is ill to attend at the
place where the magistrate usually sits, or any other
reasonable cause, it appears desirable to do so, and may
remand the accused person if required, but the remand shall
not be for more than eight days, the day following that on
which the remand is made being counted as the first day;
(d) order that no person, other than the officers of the
magistrate’s court, the persons engaged in the prosecution,
and the accused person, and his counsel or solicitor (if any),
shall have access to or remain in the room or building in
which the inquiry is being held (which shall not be deemed
an open court) if it appears to him that the ends of justice will
be best answered by so doing; and
(e) regulate the course of the inquiry in any way appearing
to him desirable and not inconsistent with this Act or any
other written law for the time being in force.

63. (1) It shall not be lawful to print or publish or cause or procure Restriction on
to be printed or published, in relation to any preliminary inquiry under publication of
this Act, any particulars other than the following: report of

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LAWS OF GUYANA

46 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

preliminary (a) the names, addresses and occupation of the accused


inquiry. person and the witnesses;
[57 of 1952
(b) a concise statement of the charge and the defence in
19 of 1991]
support of which evidence has been given;
(c) submissions on any point of law arising in the course of
the inquiry and the decision of the magistrate thereon:

Provided that subject to the further proviso following nothing


herein shall apply to the printing or reproduction by any other method
of any pleading, transcript of evidence or other documents for use in
connection with any judicial proceedings or the communication
thereof to persons concerned in the proceedings, or to the printing or
publishing of any notice or report in pursuance of the directions of the
magistrate:

Provided further that in respect of a rape offence no matter likely


to lead members of the public to identify a person as the complainant
in relation to that offence shall either be published in Guyana in a
written publication available to the public or be broadcast in Guyana
except as authorised by a direction given in pursuance of section 77A
of the Criminal Law (Offences) Act.

(2) In this section “complainant”, “rape offence” and “written


publication” have the same meanings as in section 77A (7) of the
Criminal Law (Offences) Act.

(3) Any person who contravenes this section shall be liable on


summary conviction to a fine of forty-eight thousand seven hundred
and fifty dollars or to imprisonment for six months.

Proceedings in 64. All proceedings at the preliminary inquiry under this Act
camera. relating to offences under sections 66, 67, 69, 70, 71, 75, 76, 77 and 87
[19 of 1991]
(1) of the Criminal Law (Offences) Act are to be held in camera unless
the Court otherwise orders.

Taking of 65. (1) When an accused person is before a magistrate holding a


evidence for preliminary inquiry, the magistrate shall take the evidence of the
prosecution.
witnesses on the part of the prosecutor.
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 47

(2) The evidence of those witnesses shall be given in the


presence of the accused person; and the accused person shall be
entitled to cross-examine them.

(3) The evidence of each witness shall be taken down in writing Fourth
in the form of a deposition, and as nearly as possible in the witness’s Schedule.
Form 2.
own words.

(4) The deposition shall, at some time before the accused person
is called on for his defence, be read over to and signed by the witness
and the magistrate; the accused person, the witness, and the magistrate
being all present together at the time of the reading and signing.

(5) Any witness who refuses, without reasonable excuse, to


sign his deposition may be committed by the magistrate holding the
inquiry by a warrant to prison, there to be kept until after the trial, or
until the witness signs his deposition before a magistrate:

Provided that, if the accused person is afterwards discharged,


any magistrate may order the witness to be discharged.

(6) The signature of the magistrate shall be at the end of the


deposition of each witness, in such a form as to show that it is meant to
authenticate the deposition.

(7) Every magistrate holding a preliminary inquiry is hereby


required to cause the depositions to be written in a legible hand, and on
one side only of each sheet of paper on which they are written, and the
paper shall be white, of ordinary foolscap size and of good quality, and
shall have a margin of about two inches in width.

66. (1) After the examination of the witnesses called on the part of Charging
the prosecutor has been completed, and after the depositions have been accused
signed as aforesaid, the magistrate, if of the opinion that the evidence person.
[21 of 1932
has established a prima facie case against the accused, shall address 4 of 1972]
him in these words, or to the like effect:

“Do you wish to say anything in answer to the charge? You


are not obliged to say anything unless you desire to do so, but

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LAWS OF GUYANA

48 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

whatever you say will be taken down in writing and may be


given in evidence upon your trial.”

Fourth (2) Whatever the accused person then says in answer thereto
Schedule. shall be taken down in writing, as nearly as possible in the accused
Form 3.
person’s own words, and shall be signed by the accused person, if he
will, and by the magistrate, and kept with the depositions of the
witnesses and dealt with as hereinafter mentioned.

Taking 67. (1) After the proceedings required by the preceding section are
evidence for completed, the magistrate shall ask the accused person if he wishes to
defence.
call any witnesses.

(2) Every witness called by the accused person who testifies to


any fact relevant to the case shall be heard, and his deposition shall be
taken, signed, and authenticated in the same manner as the deposition
of a witness for the prosecution.

Marking 68. The magistrate shall cause all writings and other articles
exhibits. exhibited by the witnesses, or any of them, to be inventorised and
labelled, or otherwise marked, in the presence of the person producing
them, so that they may be identified at the trial.

Deposition of 69. (1) Where any person able to give material evidence in respect
witness not of an indictable offence is from illness unable to attend at the place
able to attend where the magistrate usually sits, the magistrate of the district within
through
illness. which that person is shall have power to take his deposition at the place
where he is, notwithstanding that the offence was not committed in the
district of that magistrate.

(2) Section 77 shall, so far as it is applicable, apply to


depositions taken under this section, and for that purpose the
magistrate taking the deposition may exercise all the powers conferred
upon a magistrate by that section:

Provided that those powers may be exercised whether the person


accused of the indictable offence has been committed for trial or not.
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 49

(3) Every deposition taken under this section shall be


transmitted to the magistrate by whom the preliminary inquiry into the
indictable offence is being, or has been held, if it was taken by some
other magistrate, and it shall be treated in all respects in the same way,
and shall be considered for all purposes as a deposition taken upon the
preliminary inquiry.

(4) The deposition, whether taken for or against an accused


person, may be produced and given in evidence at his trial in the cases
in which a deposition taken under this Part may be produced and given
in evidence.

Discharge

70. If at the close of the case for the prosecution, or after hearing the Discharge of
accused or any witnesses he may produce, the magistrate is of the accused
person.
opinion that no sufficient case is made out to put the accused person
[22 of 1961
upon his trial for any indictable offence, he shall discharge the accused 4 of 1972]
and in that case any recognisance taken in respect of the charge shall
become void.

71. (1) In every case of a complaint or information for an indictable Costs and
offence where the accused person has been discharged, the magistrate, expenses of
if he is of opinion that the complaint or information was frivolous or frivolous or
vexatious
vexatious, may order the prosecutor, or other person by whom or at complaint or
whose instance it was made or given, to pay to the accused person his information.
just and reasonable costs, charges, and expenses, and those of his
witnesses, caused or occasioned by, or consequent upon, the making of
the complaint or giving of the information.

(2) The amount of the costs, charges, and expenses shall be


fixed by the magistrate and payment thereof may be enforced by
distress in manner provided in Part IV of the Summary Jurisdiction c. 10:02
(Procedure) Act.

(3) Every order made under this section shall be subject to Appeal.
appeal in the manner and subject to the conditions prescribed in the
Summary Jurisdiction (Appeals) Act. c. 3:04

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50 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

Committal for Trial

Committal of 72. If, upon the whole of the evidence, the magistrate is of opinion
accused person that a sufficient case is made out to put the accused person upon his trial
for trial.
for any indictable offence he shall, subject to section 9, commit him
[22 of 1961]
Fourth for trial to the next practicable sitting of the court for the county in
Schedule. which the inquiry is held.
Form 15.
Power of 73. (1) In any case where the magistrate discharges an accused
Director of person, the Director of Public Prosecutions may require the magistrate
Public to send to him the depositions taken in the cause, or a copy thereof, and
Prosecutions
to remit case
any other documents or things connected with the cause which he
for committal. thinks fit.
[4 of 1972]
(2)(i) Where before the discharge of the accused person the
provisions of sections 66 and 67 have been complied with,
the Director of Public Prosecutions may, if after the receipt
of those documents and things he is of the opinion that the
accused should have been committed for trial, remit those
documents and things to the magistrate with directions to
reopen the inquiry and to commit the accused for trial, and
may give such further directions as he may think proper.

(ii)(a) Where before the discharge of the accused person


the provisions of sections 66 and 67 have not been complied
with and the Director of Public Prosecutions, after the
receipt of those documents and things, is of opinion that the
evidence given on behalf of the prosecution had established
a prima facie case against the accused, the Director of Public
Prosecutions may remit those documents and things to the
magistrate with directions to reopen the inquiry and to
comply with sections 66 and 67, and may give such further
directions as he may think proper.
(b) After complying with the directions given by the
Director of Public Prosecutions under subparagraph (a), the
magistrate may either commit the accused for trial or he may
adjourn the inquiry and, subject to any directions on the
matter given by the Director of Public Prosecutions,
forthwith notify the Director of Public Prosecutions who
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 51

shall give any further directions as he may deem fit and, if of


opinion that a sufficient case has been made out for the
accused to answer, may direct the magistrate to commit the
accused for trial.

(3) Any directions given by the Director of Public Prosecutions


under this section shall be in writing signed by him, and shall be
followed by the magistrate, who shall have all necessary power for that
purpose.

(4) The Director of Public Prosecutions may at any time add to,
alter, or revoke any of his directions.

74. Every person committed for trial, whether bailed or not, shall be Copy of
entitled, at any reasonable time before the trial, to have copies of the depositions for
accused
depositions and of his own statement (if any) from the clerk of the person.
magistrate’s court, or, if the documents relating to the inquiry have [33 of 1955]
been transmitted by the magistrate as hereinafter provided, from the
Registrar.

75. (1) When an accused person is committed for trial, the Binding over
magistrate holding the preliminary inquiry shall bind over every to give
evidence.
witness for the prosecution whose deposition has been taken, and every
witness for the defence whose evidence is, in his opinion material, to
give evidence at the trial of the accused person before the court.

(2) Every recognisance so entered into shall specify the


forename and surname of the person entering into it, his occupation or
profession (if any), the place of his residence, and the name and
number (if any) of any street in which it is.

(3) The recognisance may be either at the foot of the deposition Fourth
or separate therefrom, and shall be acknowledged by the person Schedule.
Form 2.
entering into it and subscribed by the magistrate before whom it is
Form 12.
acknowledged.

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52 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

(4) Any witness who refuses without reasonable excuse to enter


into the recognisance may be committed to prison by the warrant of the
magistrate holding the inquiry, there to be kept until after the trial, or
until the witness enters into the recognisance before a magistrate:

Provided that, if the accused person is afterwards discharged, any


magistrate may order the witness to be discharged.

Form 8. (5) On binding over a witness, the magistrate shall deliver or


cause to be delivered to him a notice in writing informing him of the
day on which the sitting of the court will commence, and of the manner
in which he can ascertain the day fixed for the trial of the cause.

TITLE 5—PROCEEDINGS SUBSEQUENT TO COMMITTAL OF


ACCUSED PERSON

Transmission 76. (1) The following documents shall, as soon as may be after the
of documents committal of the accused person, be transmitted by the magistrate to
relating to the Registrar, that is to say, the information (if any), the depositions of
cause.
the witnesses, the documentary exhibits thereto, the statement of the
accused person, and the recognisances entered into.

(2) A copy of those documents shall at the same time be


transmitted by the magistrate to the Director of Public Prosecutions.

(3) All exhibits, other than documentary exhibits, shall, unless


the magistrate otherwise directs, be taken charge of by the police, who
shall produce them at the trial.

Deposition of 77. (1) After an accused person has been committed for trial, proof
witness after upon oath may be given, either by the prosecutor or by the accused
committal of
accused
person, that any person who has not been examined as a witness is able
person. to give evidence tending to prove either the guilt or the innocence of the
accused person.

(2) That proof shall, if practicable, be given before the


magistrate by whom the accused person was committed, and, if not so
practicable, then before some other magistrate, and shall be taken in
the form of a deposition as hereinbefore provided.
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Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 53

(3) The magistrate, if he is satisfied by the proof that it is for the


interests of justice that the examination should take place, shall appoint
a time and place for the examination of the person intended to be
examined, and if that person is able to attend the magistrate shall have
the same powers for compelling the person’s attendance as he has for
compelling the attendance of witnesses at the preliminary inquiry.

(4) The person making the application shall give reasonable Fourth
notice in writing to the accused person or the prosecutor, as the case Schedule.
may be, and to the Director of Public Prosecutions, of the time and Form 21.
place at which the examination is to take place, and the magistrate
shall, before taking the deposition, be satisfied that that notice has been
given.

(5) If the application is made by the prosecutor and if the


accused person is in prison, the magistrate may, by an order in writing
under the magistrate’s hand, direct the keeper of the prison having the
custody of the accused person to convey him, or cause him to be
conveyed, to the place where the examination is to be taken, for the
purpose of being present when it is taken, and to take him back to
prison afterwards.

(6) At the time and place appointed, the magistrate shall take the
deposition of the person to be examined in the same way in which other
depositions are taken, and all the provisions of law relating to the
reading over and signing of depositions, and to their admissibility in
evidence, shall apply to that deposition:

Provided that—

(a) if the party against whom the deposition is to be read


neglects to attend at the time when it is taken, after receiving
due notice thereof, it shall be admissible in evidence against
him, although it was taken and signed in his absence; and
(b) if the accused person or the prosecutor does not himself
attend at the taking of the deposition, but causes his counsel
or solicitor to attend, the counsel or solicitor shall be entitled
to cross-examine the witness.

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54 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

(7) Every deposition taken under this section shall be


transmitted, together with a copy thereof, by the magistrate and shall
be treated in all respects in the same way as, and shall be considered as
being for all purposes, a deposition taken upon the preliminary inquiry.

Power to 78. (1) At any time within six months after the receipt of any
Director of documents mentioned in this Title, the Director of Public Prosecutions
Public
Prosecutions
may, if he thinks fit, remit the cause to the magistrate with directions
to remit cause to re-open the inquiry for the purpose of taking evidence or further
for further evidence on a certain point or points to be specified, and with any other
inquiry. directions he thinks proper.
[21 of 1978]
(2) Subject to any express directions given by the Director of
Public Prosecutions, the effect of remission to the magistrate shall be
that the inquiry shall be re-opened and dealt with in all respects as if the
accused person had not been committed for trial.

Power of 79. If, after the receipt of any documents mentioned in this Title, the
Director of Director of Public Prosecutions is of opinion that the accused person
Public should not have been committed for trial but that the matter should
Prosecutions
to remit cause have been dealt with summarily, the Director of Public Prosecutions
to be dealt may, if he thinks fit, at any time after that receipt, remit the cause to the
with magistrate with directions to deal with it accordingly, and with any
summarily. other directions he thinks proper.

Further 80. (1) Any directions given by the Director of Public Prosecutions
provisions as under either of the last two preceding sections shall be in writing
to remission of
signed by him, and shall be followed by the magistrate.
case.

(2) The Director of Public Prosecutions may at any time add to,
alter, or revoke any of the directions.

(3) The Registrar, at the request in writing of the Director of


Public Prosecutions, shall send back to the magistrate the original
documents transmitted to him by the magistrate.
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Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 55

(4) When the Director of Public Prosecutions directs that an


inquiry shall be re-opened under section 78, or that a matter shall be
dealt with summarily under section 79, the following provisions shall
have effect:

(a) where the accused person is in custody, the magistrate


may, by an order in writing under his hand, direct the keeper
of the prison having his custody to convey him or cause him
to be conveyed to the place where the proceedings are to be
held for the purpose of being dealt with as the magistrate
directs;
(b) where the accused person is on bail, the magistrate shall c. 10:02
issue a summons for his attendance at the time and place
when and where the proceedings are to be held; and
(c) thereafter the proceedings shall be continued under this
Act or the Summary Jurisdiction (Procedure) Act, as the
case may be, and, if under the last-mentioned Act, in the
same manner as if the magistrate had himself formed an
opinion in terms of section 33 of that Act.

81. (1) Where any person has been committed for trial by a Condition
magistrate, if it appears to the Director of Public Prosecutions that under which
witnesses at a
attendance at the trial of any witness who has been examined for the
preliminary
prosecution and bound over is unnecessary, the Director of Public inquiry need
Prosecutions may cause a notice to be given to such person that the not be called at
witness will not be called at the trial, and shall at the same time instruct the trial.
the Commissioner of Police to serve notice on the witness not to attend [21 of 1932]
the trial.

(2) Where notice under subsection (1) has been given to the
person committed for trial he may give notice at any time to the
Registrar of the Supreme Court that he desires the witness to attend at
the trial, and the Registrar shall forthwith inform the Commissioner of
Police of the fact and he shall thereupon cause notice to be served on
the witness that he is required to attend in pursuance of his
recognisance and the witness shall be bound to attend accordingly.

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56 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

(3) Where a magistrate commits a person for trial the magistrate


shall ask such person to state the address at which a notice may be
delivered for him under subsection (1) if he shall be on bail, and the
magistrate shall note the address at the end of the depositions and shall
inform the person committed for trial of his right to require the
attendance at the trial of any such witness whose evidence he requires
and of the steps which he must take for the purpose of enforcing such
attendance.

(4) Any notice to a person committed for trial or to the Registrar


shall be in writing, and a notice to a person committed for trial shall be
sufficiently served if it is delivered to the keeper of the prison in which
the person is confined, or if he is on bail at the address given to the
magistrate by him.

Seventh (5) Service of a notice under this section shall be made by a


Schedule. constable and a return of service in the form in the Seventh Schedule
endorsed on a copy of the notice purporting to be signed by the
constable shall be sufficient evidence of the facts stated therein
without proof of the signature or of the official character of the
constable.

TITLE 6— BAIL

Right of 82. With respect to bail, the following provisions shall have effect:
accused person
to bail.
(a) where a person is remanded on bail the recognisance
Continuous
bail. may be conditioned for his appearance at every time and
place to which during the course of the proceedings the
hearing is from time to time adjourned, without prejudice,
however, to the power of the court to vary the order at any
subsequent hearing;
Saving. (b) the provisions of the preceding paragraph are in
addition to, and not in derogation of, any other enactment
governing the taking of recognisances in any Act passed
before those provisions came into force;
(c) where the offence with which the accused person is
charged is a misdemeanour punishable with fine or with
imprisonment for any term not exceeding two years, the
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Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 57

accused person shall be entitled to be admitted to bail as


hereinafter mentioned;
(d) where the offence with which the accused person is
charged is a misdemeanour punishable otherwise than as in
this section before-mentioned, or, subject to the exceptions
hereafter in this section mentioned, is a felony, the
magistrate may, in his discretion, admit the accused person
to bail as hereinafter mentioned; and
(e) a magistrate shall not admit to bail any person charged
with treason, misprision of treason, treason felony, or
murder.

83. (1) Every accused person whether committed to prison or not Bailing of
shall or may, as the case may be, be admitted to bail, upon providing a accused on
adjournment
surety or sureties sufficient, in the opinion of the magistrate, to secure
of inquiry.
his appearance, or upon his own recognisance, if the magistrate thinks
fit; and where, by any written law for the time being in force, bail may Fourth
be allowed or refused in the discretion of the magistrate, that discretion Schedule.
Form 12.
may be exercised at any stage of the proceedings.

(2) Whenever the preliminary inquiry is for any reason


adjourned or interrupted, the magistrate holding it shall or may, as the
case may be, instead of remanding the accused person to prison, admit
him to bail on condition of his appearing at the time to which the
inquiry is adjourned, or at an earlier day if so required.

(3) If an accused person who has appeared and has been


admitted to bail (either on the recognisance of sureties or on his own
recognisance) to appear at any adjournment, fails to appear according
to the condition of the recognisance, the magistrate before whom he
ought to have appeared may issue a warrant for his apprehension,
whether there has been any information in writing and upon oath or Form 9.
not.

84. (1) An accused person who is not admitted to bail shall be Committal of
committed for safe custody to prison, or as the case may require. accused person
to prison for
safe custody
(2) If the magistrate adjourns the preliminary inquiry and
remands the accused person, the remand shall be by warrant.

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pending (3) The magistrate may, whilst the accused person is under
preliminary remand and before the expiration of the period of remand, order the
inquiry.
accused person to be brought before him, and the keeper of the prison
shall obey the order, or, if the accused person is on bail, the magistrate
may summon him to appear at an earlier day than that to which he was
Fourth remanded; and if that summons is not obeyed, a warrant may issue to
Schedule. enforce his attendance, and may be executed like any other warrant.
Form 15.
Bailing 85. (1) If an accused person who is committed for trial is admitted
accused person to bail, the recognisance of bail shall be taken in writing, either from
on committal
the accused person and one or more surety or sureties, or from the
for trial.
[22 of 1961] accused person alone, in the discretion of the magistrate, according to
Fourth the nature and circumstances of the case, and shall be signed by the
Schedule. accused person and his surety or sureties, if any.
Form 12.
(2) The condition of the recognisance shall be that the accused
person shall personally appear before the High Court at its next
practicable sitting (which shall be specified) to be held in Georgetown,
Suddie, or New Amsterdam, or elsewhere, as the case may be, there
and then, or at any time within twelve months from the date of the
recognisance, to answer to any indictment that may be filed against
him in the said Court, and that he will not depart the said Court without
leave of the Court, and that he will accept service of the indictment at
the magistrate’s court nominated by him in pursuance of section 116.

Conveying 86. (1) If an accused person who is committed for trial is not
accused person released on bail, the police or other constable to whom the warrant of
to prison after commitment is directed shall convey him to the prison and there
committal for
trial. deliver him, together with the warrant, to the keeper of the prison, who
Fourth shall thereupon give the police or other constable a receipt for him,
Schedule. which shall set forth the condition in which he was when he was
Form 22. delivered into the custody of the keeper.

(2) It shall not be necessary to address any warrant of


commitment under this or any other section of this Act to the keeper of
the prison, but upon delivery of the warrant to the keeper by the person
charged with the execution thereof, the keeper shall receive and detain
the person named therein (or detain him, if already in the keeper’s
custody) for the period and the purpose directed by the warrant. In case
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Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 59

of adjournments or remands, the keeper shall bring him, or cause him


to be brought, at the time and place fixed by the warrant for that
purpose, before the magistrate.

(3) This section shall apply to every person committed to prison


under any provision of this Act.

87. (1) If an accused person who is entitled to be admitted to bail, or Bailing


if an accused person whom the magistrate has power to bail and who, accused person
after committal
in his opinion, ought to be bailed, is committed to prison only because for trial.
he does not, at the time of his committal for trial, procure a sufficient Fourth
surety or sureties for appearing to take his trial, the magistrate shall Schedule.
endorse on the warrant of commitment, or on a separate paper, a Forms 10 or
11.
certificate of his consent to the accused person being bailed, and shall
state the amount of bail which ought to be required; and any magistrate
attending or being at the prison whilst the accused person is confined
therein, shall, on the production of that certificate, admit him to bail
accordingly and order him to be discharged by a warrant of
deliverance.

(2)(a) The magistrate holding the preliminary inquiry,


shall, if required at any time before the trial, by or on behalf
of the accused person, make and sign one or more duplicate
copies of the aforesaid certificate, and, on the production of
a duplicate to any justice of the peace, the justice may take
the recognisance of one or more sureties in conformity
therewith, and shall thereupon transmit the recognisance to
the magistrate of the district in which the accused person
was committed.
(b) When the recognisances of all the sureties required
have been received, the committing magistrate shall issue
his warrant of deliverance to the keeper, requiring him to Form 17.
take the recognisance of the accused person and to discharge
him, and the keeper is hereby authorised to take that
recognisance, and shall forthwith do so and discharge the
accused person, unless he is in his custody for some other
reason.

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60 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

Power of the 88. The Court or a judge may at any time, on the petition of an
Court or judge accused person, order him, whether he has been committed for trial or
to bail accused not, to be admitted to bail, and the recognisance of bail may, if the order
person.
so directs, be taken before any magistrate or justice of the peace.

Apprehension 89. Where an accused person has been bailed in manner aforesaid,
of accused the magistrate by whom he has been bailed, or any other magistrate or
person on bail
justice of the peace, if he sees fit, on the application of the surety or of
but about to
abscond. either of the sureties of the person, and on information being laid in
writing, and upon oath by that surety, or by some person on the surety’s
behalf, that there is reason to believe that the person so bailed is about
to abscond for the purpose of evading justice, may issue his warrant for
the apprehension of the person so bailed, and afterwards, on being
satisfied that the ends of justice would otherwise be defeated, may
commit him when so arrested to prison until his trial, or until he
produces another sufficient surety or other sufficient sureties, as the
case may be, in like manner as before.

Amount of 90. (1) The amount to be taken in any case shall be in the discretion
bail. of the magistrate, or of the Court or the judge, by whom the order for
[19 of 1990]
the taking of the bail is made, but no accused person shall be required
to give excessive bail.

(2) The magistrate, or the Court, or the judge, may accept a


deposit of money from or on account of any person in lieu of a surety
or sureties, and on any breach of the condition of his recognisance that
deposit shall be forfeited and shall be dealt with in the same manner as
sums of money recovered in respect of forfeited recognisances.

Bailing infant. (3) If an accused person who is admitted to bail is an infant, the
recognisance of bail shall be taken only from the surety or sureties.

PART III

PROCEEDINGS IN THE COURT

TITLE 7— MODE OF TRIAL

General mode 91. (1) Every person committed for trial shall be tried on an
of trial. indictment in the Court.
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Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 61

(2) Subject to the next succeeding section, the trial shall be had
by and before a judge of the Court and a jury constituted under this Act.

92. On motion made by the Director of Public Prosecutions, a judge Trial at bar.
shall order that the trial of any indictment shall be had at bar, that is to
say by and before two or three judges of the Court and a jury
constituted under this Act, and that trial shall be had accordingly.

93. (1) Nothing in this Act shall affect the right of the Director of Saving of right
Public Prosecutions to file an information in the Court against any of Director of
Public
person for any misdemeanour.
Prosecutions
to file
(2) Subject to this Act or any other written law for the time information
being in force, the law, practice, and procedure in respect of an for
information shall be, as nearly as may be, the same as the law, practice, misdemeanour.
and procedure for the time being in force in relation to informations
filed by the Attorney-General of England in the High Court of Justice
in England, so far as that law, practice, and procedure is applicable to
the circumstances of Guyana.

94. For the purposes of the next five succeeding sections, unless the Meaning of
context otherwise requires— “the rules”.

“the rules” means the rules with respect to indictments (which shall
have effect as if enacted herein), contained in the Fifth Sched- Fifth Schedule.
ule; and includes any further or other rules made under the
provisions of the next succeeding section;

“the court” means the court before which any offence punishable on
indictment is tried or prosecuted.

95. (1) There shall be established a rule committee consisting of the Rule
judges of the Supreme Court, or a majority of them including the Committee.
Chancellor and the Chief Justice, the Director of Public Prosecutions,
and the State Solicitor, and another person having experience in
criminal procedure appointed by the Chancellor.

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62 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

(2) Subject to negative resolution of the National Assembly, the


rule committee may make further rules with respect to the matters dealt
with in the rules, and the rules shall have effect subject thereto.

(3) The term of office of the person appointed to be a member of


the committee as aforesaid shall be that specified in the appointment.

Presentation 96. (1) Every indictment shall be presented by and in the name of
and suffi- the Director of Public Prosecutions and shall contain and be sufficient
ciency of
indictment
if it contains, a statement of the specific offence or offences with which
the accused person is charged, together with the particulars necessary
for giving reasonable information as to the nature of the charge.

(2) Notwithstanding any rule of law or practice, an indictment


shall not, subject to this Act, be open to objection in respect of its form
or contents if it is framed in accordance with the rules.

Joinder of 97. Subject to the rules, charges for more than one felony or for
charges in the more than one misdemeanour, and charges for both felonies and
same indict-
ment.
misdemeanours, may be joined in the same indictment, but where a
felony is tried together with any misdemeanour, the jury shall be sworn
and the person accused shall have the same right of challenging jurors
as if all the offences charged in the indictment were felonies.

Orders for 98. (1) Where, before trial, or at any stage of a trial, it appears to the
amendment of Court that the indictment is defective, the Court shall make any order
indictment,
for the amendment of the indictment the Court thinks necessary to
separate trial
and postpone- meet the circumstances of the case, unless, having regard to the merits
ment of trial. of the case, the required amendments cannot be made without
injustice.

(2) Where an indictment is so amended, a note of the order for


amendment shall be endorsed on the indictment, and the indictment
shall be treated, for the purposes of the trial and for the purposes of all
proceedings in connection therewith, as if it had been originally
framed as amended.
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Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 63

(3) Where, before trial, or at any stage of a trial, the Court is of


opinion that a person accused may be prejudiced or embarrassed in his
defence by reason of being charged with more than one offence in the
same indictment, or that for any other reason it is desirable to direct
that the person should be tried separately for any one or more offences
charged in an indictment, the Court may order a separate trial of any
count or counts of that indictment.

(4) Where, before trial, or at any stage of a trial, the Court is of


opinion that the postponement of the trial of a person accused is
expedient as a consequence of the exercise of any power of the Court
under this Act to amend an indictment or to order a separate trial of a
count, the Court shall make such order as to the postponement of the
trial as appears necessary.

(5) Where an order of the Court is made under this section for a
separate trial or for the postponement of a trial—

(a) if the order is made during a trial, the Court may order
that the jury are to be discharged from giving a verdict on the
count or counts the trial of which is postponed, or on the
indictment, as the case may be; and
(b) the procedure on the separate trial of a count shall be the
same in all respects as if the count had been laid in a separate
indictment, and the procedure on the postponed trial shall be
the same in all respects (if the jury has been discharged) as
if the trial had not commenced; and
(c) the Court may make any order as to admission of the
accused person to bail and enlargement of recognisance and
otherwise the Court thinks fit.

(6) Any power of the Court under this section shall be in


addition to and not in derogation of any power of the Court for the same
or similar purposes.

99. Nothing in the Act or the rules shall affect the law or practice Saving.
relating to the jurisdiction of a Court or the place where an accused
person can be tried, or prejudice or diminish in any respect the
obligation to establish by evidence according to law any acts,

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64 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

omissions, or intentions legally necessary to constitute the offence


with which the person accused is charged, or otherwise affect the laws
of evidence in criminal causes.

TITLE 8—PLEADING

Indictment

Variances and 100. (1) If, on the trial of any indictment, there appears to be a
amendments. variance between the proof and the charge in any count in the
indictment, either as preferred, or as amended, the Court may amend
the indictment, or any count in it, or any particulars, so as to make it
conformable with the proof; and if the Court is of opinion that the
accused person has not been misled or prejudiced in his defence by the
variance, it shall make the amendment.

(2) The trial may then proceed in all respects as if the indictment
or count had been originally framed as amended:

Provided that, if the Court is of opinion that the accused person has
been misled or prejudiced in his defence by the variance, or omission,
or defective statement aforesaid, but that the effect of his being misled
or prejudiced may be removed by adjourning or postponing the trial,
the Court may, in its discretion, make the amendment and adjourn the
trial to a future day, or discharge the jury and postpone the trial, on any
terms it thinks just.

(3) In determining whether the accused person has been misled


or prejudiced in his defence or not, the Court shall consider the
contents of the depositions as well as the other circumstances of the
case.

When full 101. Where the complete commission of the offence charged is not
offence proved, but the evidence establishes an attempt to commit the offence,
charged and
attempt the accused person may be convicted of the attempt, and punished
proved. accordingly:
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Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 65

Provided that, after a conviction for the attempt, the accused


person shall not be liable to be prosecuted again for the offence which
he was charged with committing.

102. Where an attempt to commit an offence is charged, but the Case of


evidence establishes the commission of the full offence, the accused attempt
charged—
person shall not be entitled to be acquitted, but he may be convicted of full offence
the attempt and punished accordingly: proved.

Provided that, after a conviction for the attempt, the accused


person shall not be liable to be prosecuted again for the offence which
he was charged with attempting to commit.

103. Every count shall be deemed divisible; and if the commission of Full offence
the offence charged, as is described in the enactment creating the charged—
part proved.
offence, or as charged in the count, includes the commission of any
[20 of 1939]
other offence, the accused person may be convicted of any offence so
included which is proved, although the whole offence charged is not
proved, or he may be convicted of an attempt to commit any offence so
included:

Provided that on a count charging murder, if the evidence proves


manslaughter, but does not prove murder, the jury may find the
accused person not guilty of murder but guilty of manslaughter.

104. Where a misdemeanour is charged, and the evidence Misdemeanour


establishes the commission of a felony the accused person shall not by charged—
reason thereof be entitled to be acquitted of the misdemeanour: felony proved.

Provided that no person tried for a misdemeanour shall be liable to


be afterwards prosecuted for felony on the same facts, unless the Court
before which that trial is had thinks fit, in its discretion, to discharge the
jury from giving any verdict thereon, and to direct the person to be
indicted for felony, in which case he may be dealt with in all respects
as if he had not been put upon his trial for the misdemeanour.

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66 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

Embezzlement 105. (1) Where embezzlement, or the fraudulent application or


charged— disposition of anything, is charged, and the evidence establishes the
larceny proved
commission of larceny of any kind, the accused person shall not be
and vice versa.
entitled to be acquitted, but he may be convicted of the larceny and
punished accordingly.

(2) Where larceny of any kind is charged, and the evidence


establishes the commission of embezzlement, or the fraudulent
application or disposition of anything, the accused person shall not be
entitled to be acquitted, but he may be convicted of the embezzlement
or fraudulent application or disposition, and punished accordingly.

(3) No person so tried for embezzlement, fraudulent application


or disposition, or larceny, as aforesaid shall be liable to be afterwards
prosecuted for larceny, fraudulent application or disposition, or
embezzlement upon the same facts.

Joinder of 106. (1) Any number of counts for any offences whatever may be
counts and joined in the same indictment, and shall be sufficiently distinguished:
proceedings
thereon.
Provided that to a count charging murder no count charging any
offence other than murder shall be joined.

(2) Where there are more counts than one in an indictment, each
count may be treated as a separate indictment.

(3) (a) If the Court thinks it conducive to the ends of justice to


do so, it may direct that the accused person shall be tried upon any one
or more of the counts separately.

(b) That order may be made either before or in the course


of the trial, and, if it is made in the course of the trial, the jury
shall be discharged from giving a verdict upon the counts on
which the trial is not to proceed.
(c) The counts in the indictment which are not then tried
shall be proceeded upon in all respects as if they had been
contained in a separate indictment:
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Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 67

Provided that, unless there are special reasons for so doing, no


order shall be made preventing the trial at the same time of any number
of distinct charges of larceny or embezzlement, not exceeding five,
alleged to have been committed within six months from the first to last
of those offences, whether against the same person or not.

(4) If one sentence is passed upon any verdict of guilty on an


indictment containing more counts than one, the sentence shall be
good if any of those counts would have justified the sentence.

107. (1) No objection to an indictment shall be taken by way of Objection to


demurrer, but if an indictment does not state in substance an indictable substance of
indictment.
offence or states an offence not triable by the Court, the accused person
may move the Court to quash it or in arrest of judgment as provided in
Title 11.

(2) If the motion is made before the accused person pleads, the
Court shall either quash the indictment or, if the Court thinks that it
ought to be amended, amend it.

(3) If the defect in the indictment appears to the Court during the
trial, and the Court does not think fit to amend it, the Court may, in its
discretion, quash the indictment, or leave the objection to be taken in
arrest of judgment.

(4) If the indictment is quashed, the Court may direct the


accused person to plead to another indictment, when called on at the
same sitting of the Court.

Pleas

108. (1) The following special pleas, and no others, may be pleaded Special pleas
according to the provisions hereinafter contained, that is to say, a plea allowed to be
of autrefois acquit, a plea of autrefois convict, a plea of pardon, and in pleaded.
cases of defamatory libel the plea hereinafter mentioned.

(2) All other grounds of defence may be relied on under the plea
of not guilty.

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(3) The plea of autrefois acquit, autrefois convict, and pardon


may be pleaded together, and if pleaded shall be disposed of before the
accused person is called on to plead further; and if all those pleas are
disposed of against the accused person, he shall be allowed to plead not
guilty.

(4) In any plea of autrefois acquit or autrefois convict, it shall be


sufficient for the accused person to state that he has been lawfully
acquitted or convicted, as the case may be, of the offence charged m the
count or counts to which that plea is pleaded.

(5) Every special plea shall be in writing, and shall be filed with
the Registrar not less than twenty-four hours before the arraignment of
the accused person.

General effect 109. (1) On the trial of an issue on a plea of autrefois acquit or
of pleas or autrefois convict to any count or counts, if it appears that the matter on
autrefois
which the accused person was tried on the former trial is the same, in
acquit and
convict. whole or in part, as that on which it is proposed to try him, and that he
might, on the former trial, have been convicted of all the offences of
which he may be convicted on the count or counts to which that plea is
pleaded, the Court shall give judgment that he be discharged from that
count or those counts.

(2) If it appears that the accused person might, on the former


trial, have been convicted of any offence of which he may be convicted
on the count or counts to which that plea is pleaded, but that he may be
convicted on the count or counts of some offence or offences of which
he could not have been convicted on the former trial, the Court shall
direct that he shall not be convicted on the count or counts of any
offence of which he might have been convicted on the former trial, but
that he shall plead over as to the other offence or offences charged.

Effect where 110. (1) Where an indictment charges substantially the same
previous offences as that charged in the indictment on which the accused person
offence
was given in charge on a former trial, but adds a statement of intention
charged was
without or circumstances of aggravation tending, if proved, to increase the
aggravation. punishment, the previous acquittal or conviction shall be a bar to the
subsequent indictment.
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Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 69

(2) A previous acquittal or conviction on an indictment for


murder shall be a bar to a second indictment for the same homicide
charging it as manslaughter, and a previous acquittal or conviction on
an indictment for manslaughter shall be a bar to a second indictment
for the same homicide charging it as murder.

111. On the trial of an issue on a plea of autrefois acquit or autrefois Use of


convict, the depositions transmitted to the Registrar on the former trial, depositions on
together with the judge’s notes, if available, and the depositions former trial on
trial of pleas.
transmitted to the Registrar on the subsequent charge, shall be
admissible in evidence to prove or disprove the identity of the charges.

112. (1) Where any person accused of publishing a defamatory libel Plea of
pleads that the defamatory matter published by him was true, and that justification in
case of libel.
it was for the public benefit that the matters charged should be
published in the manner in which and at the time when they were
published, that plea may justify the defamatory matter in the sense
specified (if any) in the count, or in the sense which the defamatory
matter bears without any specification; or separate pleas justifying the
defamatory matter in each sense may be pleaded separately, as if two
libels had been charged in separate counts.

(2) The plea must be in writing, and must set forth the particular
fact or facts by reason of which it was for the public good that the
matters should be so published, and the State may reply generally
denying the truth thereof.

(3) The truth of the matters charged in an alleged libel shall not
in any case be inquired into without the plea of justification, unless the
accused person is put upon his trial on any indictment alleging that he
published the libel knowing it to be false, when evidence of the truth
may be given in order to negative that allegation.

(4) The accused person may, in addition to the plea, plead not
guilty, and inquiry shall be made of those pleas together, but no plea of
justification herein provided for shall be pleaded to any indictment or
count so far as it charges a libel to be a seditious, or blasphemous, or
obscene libel.

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(5) If when a plea of justification is pleaded the accused


person is convicted, the Court may, in pronouncing
sentence, consider whether his guilt is aggravated or
mitigated by the plea.

(6) If, when a plea of justification is pleaded, the issue


thereon is found against the accused person, the State shall
be entitled to recover from the accused person the costs
sustained by the State by reason of the plea, to be taxed by
the Registrar.

Application of 113. The provisions of this Part relating to indictments shall apply to
previous criminal information, and those of sections 96, 97, 98 and 99 shall
provisions to
(with any modifications by the rules made under section 95) apply to
criminal
information. any plea, replication, or other criminal pleading.

TITLE 9—PROCEEDINGS PRELIMINARY TO TRIAL

Institution of 114. (1) On receipt of the documents relating to the preliminary


proceedings by inquiry, the Director of Public Prosecutions, if he sees fit to do so, shall
Director of at any time institute those criminal proceedings in the Court against
Public
Prosecutions. the accused person which to him seem legal and proper.
[22 of 1961
5 of 1962] (2) The indictment against the accused person may include,
either in substitution for or in addition to counts charging the offence
for which he was committed, any counts founded on facts or evidence
disclosed in any examination or deposition taken before a magistrate in
his presence, being counts which may lawfully be joined in the same
indictment.

(3) No objection to any indictment presented against an accused


person (whether before or after the commencement of this subsection)
shall be allowed on the ground that the indictment has been filed after
the end of that sitting of the Court to which he was committed for trial.

Right of 115. (1) At any time after the receipt of the documents aforesaid, and
Director of either before or at the trial and at any time before verdict, the Director
Public of Public Prosecutions may enter nolle prosequi either by stating in
Prosecutions
Court or by informing the Court in writing that the State intends that
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the proceedings shall not continue, and, thereupon, the accused person to enter nolle
shall be at once discharged in respect of the charge for which nolle prosequi.
prosequi is entered, and if he has been committed to prison, shall be
released, or if he is on bail, his recognisance shall be discharged, but his
discharge shall not operate as a bar to any subsequent proceedings
against him on the same facts.

(2) If the accused is not before the Court when nolle prosequi is
entered, the Registrar shall cause notice in writing of the entry to be
given to the keeper of the prison in which the accused is detained, and
also to the magistrate of the district in which he was committed for
trial, and the magistrate shall forthwith cause a similar notice in writing
to be given to any witnesses bound over to give evidence at the trial and
to the accused and his sureties if he has been admitted to bail.

116. (1) Subject to the provisions hereafter in this section contained, Filing and
every indictment shall be filed in the registry three days at least before service of copy
of indictment.
the day of trial of the accused person charged in the indictment.
[22 of 1961]

(2) The Registrar shall two days at least before the day of trial
deliver or cause to be delivered—

(a) to the keeper of the prison to which the accused person


has been committed to await trial; or
(b) to the clerk of the magistrate’s court nominated for the
purpose by the accused person if and when he is admitted to
bail,

a certified copy of the indictment and the copy shall be given to the
accused person, if he is in custody by the keeper of the prison, or if he
has been admitted to bail, by the clerk of the magistrate’s court if and
when he calls for it at the magistrate’s court.

(3) For the purposes of the last preceding subsection—

(a) the delivery to the keeper or to the clerk of the


magistrate’s court of the copy may be made by transmitting
it in a registered letter by post properly addressed to him;

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(b) any receipt purporting to be given by any officer of the


post office for the registered letter shall be deemed prima
facie evidence of the posting on the day stated therein of the
letter addressed as described in the receipt; and
(c) a certificate, signed by the Registrar, that a certified
copy of an indictment was enclosed in the registered letter
shall be deemed prima facie evidence that copy reached the
accused person charged in the indictment.

(4) An accused person may dispense with either or both of the


requirements as to time hereinbefore contained.

(5) Whenever the Court orders or allows another indictment to


be preferred at the same sitting of the Court for the same offence or for
a minor offence, the accused person shall not be entitled to have a copy
served upon him for a longer period than twenty-four hours before his
arraignment on the other indictment.

Bench warrant 117. Where any person against whom an indictment has been duly
where accused presented and who is then at large does not appear to plead thereto,
person does
not appear.
whether he is under recognisance to appear or not, the Court may issue
a warrant for his apprehension.

Abolition of 118. No person shall be tried upon any coroner’s inquisition.


trial on
coroner’s
inquisition.

Change of 119. (1) Where an accused person is committed for trial, the Court or
venue and a judge, on motion made by or on behalf of the Director of Public
proceedings
Prosecutions or by the accused person, and on sufficient grounds
thereon.
shown upon oath to the satisfaction of the Court or judge, may order
that the trial of the cause shall take place in some other county than that
in which the accused person has been committed for trial.

(2) On that order being made, the cause shall be tried and
determined in the county directed by the order; and all recognisances,
subpoenas, and proceedings in or relating to the cause, shall thereupon
be deemed to be returnable, and shall, by virtue of the order, be
forthwith transferred and returned, into that county, and all witnesses
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Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 73

who are bound by recognisance or summoned to attend the trial shall


attend in that county, and any final judgment, sentence, or order in the
cause shall be carried into execution in the county or place directed by
the Court before which the trial is had.

120. Outlawry in criminal cases is abolished. Abolition of


outlawry.
TITLE 10—WITNESSES

Attendance of Witness

121. Everyone bound by recognisance to attend any sitting of the Attendance of


Court as a witness, whether for the prosecution or for the defence, in witness
bound by
any cause to be tried at the sitting, shall be bound to attend the Court,
recognisance
without any subpoena or notice, on the day appointed for the trial of the to attend.
cause and on subsequent days of the sitting, until it has been disposed
of, or until he has been discharged by the Court from further
attendance:

Provided that on satisfying the Registrar that he has attended the


Court on any day in the sitting earlier than the day appointed for the
trial of the cause in which he is a witness, and that he resides more than
five miles from a place mentioned in section 4, he shall be entitled to
have his expenses for that day allowed.

122. Every person whose attendance as a witness, whether for the Writ of
prosecution or for the defence, is required in any cause, and who has subpoena for
witness.
not been bound by recognisance to attend as a witness at the sitting
of the Court at which the cause is to be tried, shall be summoned by a
writ of subpoena which shall issue in the name of the Registrar of the
Supreme Court.

123. (1) On being furnished at any time before or during any sitting Preparation
of the Court, with the names and places of abode of any witnesses on and issue of
writ.
behalf of the prosecution or of the defence whose attendance at the trial
[33 of 1955
of any cause is required to be secured by subpoena, the Registrar shall 4 of 1972
prepare, and deliver to the police officer in charge of the county in 6 of 1997]
which the Court is sitting, a writ or writs of subpoena, together with as
many copies thereof as there are witnesses named in the writ or writs.

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74 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

(2) Where a writ is applied for and obtained by any accused


person who has been committed for trial on a charge of having
committed any indictable offence other than a capital offence, the
Registrar shall insert in the margin of the writ the name of the person
who applied for and obtained it, and that person shall pay to the
Registrar the sum of sixty-five dollars:

Provided that the Court may, on the application of an accused


person, direct the registrar to prepare and issue a writ, free of charge,
where the Court is satisfied that such person has not the means to pay
the charge prescribed in this subsection.

(3) Where application is made to the Court to postpone the trial


of any cause on the ground of the absence of any witness stated to be
material, it shall be taken as prima facie evidence, liable, nevertheless,
to be rebutted, that the party applying for the postponement has not
exercised due diligence to secure the attendance of that witness, if it
appears that no subpoena to him was served in time to enable him to
attend on the day of trial.

Service of 124. (1) The police officer shall with all diligence cause a member of
writ. the police force to serve a writ of subpoena upon every person named
[4 of 1972]
therein by delivering a copy thereof to him personally, or, if he cannot,
with the exercise of reasonable diligence, be encountered, by leaving a
copy of it with some person for him at his last or most usual place of
abode.

(2) The officer serving the writ shall note the service, with the
date thereof, upon the original writ and shall forthwith deliver the
original writ to the office of the Registrar, with a certificate thereon
endorsed and subscribed as to the service or non-service thereof, as the
circumstances of the case may require; and in all cases the return of the
officer, duly certified as aforesaid shall be received and taken as prima
facie evidence of the facts in the return.

(3) No fee shall be payable for the service of the writ, except in
respect of any witness required for the defence, in any event other than
that of a capital offence, whose deposition has not been taken at the
preliminary inquiry and transmitted with the documents in the cause,
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Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 75

and in that case the officer shall not serve the writ until a reasonable
sum has been lodged with the Registrar by the accused person for the
expense of the service.

125. If anyone to whom the writ is directed does not attend the Court Warrant for
at the time and place mentioned therein, and no reasonable excuse is apprehension
of witness
offered for his non-attendance, then, after proof upon oath, to the
disobeying
satisfaction of the Court, that the writ was duly served or that that summons.
person wilfully avoids service, the Court, being satisfied, by proof
upon oath, that he is likely to give material evidence, may issue a
warrant to apprehend him, and to bring him, at a time to be mentioned
in the warrant, before the Court in order to give evidence on behalf of
the prosecution or of the defence, as the case may be.

126. If any person who has been bound by recognisance to attend as Warrant for
a witness, whether for the prosecution or for the defence, at the trial of apprehension
of witness not
any cause does not attend the Court on the day appointed for that trial, attending on
and no reasonable excuse is offered for his non-attendance, the Court recognisance.
may issue a warrant to apprehend him, and to bring him, at a time to be
mentioned in the warrant, before the Court in order to give evidence on
behalf of the prosecution or of the defence, as the case may be.

127. Every person who makes default in attending as a witness in Penalty for
either of the cases mentioned in the last two preceding sections shall be non-attendance
of witness.
liable, on the summary order of the Court, to a fine of nineteen
[6 of 1997]
thousand five hundred dollars and, in default of payment, to
imprisonment for two months.

128. (1) If a judge is satisfied, by proof upon oath, that any person Warrant for
likely to give material evidence, either for the prosecution or for the apprehension
of witness in
defence, on the trial of any cause, will not attend to give evidence
first instance.
without being compelled to do so, he may order that, instead of a
subpoena being issued, a warrant shall be issued in the first instance for
the apprehension of that person.

(2) Every person arrested under the warrant shall, if the trial of
the cause for which his evidence is required is appointed for a time
which is more than twenty-four hours after the arrest, be taken before
a judge, and the judge may, on his furnishing security by recognisance,

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76 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

to the satisfaction of the judge, for his appearance at the trial, order him
to be released from custody, or shall on his failing to furnish that
security
order him to be detained for production at the trial.

List of 129. Neither the State nor the accused person shall be required to file
witnesses not any list of the witnesses to be examined or of the documentary
required to be evidence to be produced at the trial on behalf of the prosecution or of
filed.
the defence.

Examination of Witness

Mode of 130. (l) Where any person, attending the Court as a witness either
dealing with on his recognisance, or in obedience to a subpoena, or by virtue of a
witness
warrant, or being present in Court and being verbally required by the
refusing to be
sworn or to Court to give evidence in any cause—
give or
produce (a) refuses to be sworn as a witness; or
evidence. (b) having been so sworn, refuses to answer any question
[6 of 1997]
put to him by or with the sanction of the Court; or
(c) refuses or neglects to produce any document which he
is required by the Court to produce,

without in any of those cases offering any sufficient excuse for the
refusal or neglect, the Court may, if it thinks fit, adjourn or postpone
the trial of the cause for any period not later than the ensuing sitting of
the Court for the same county, and may in the meantime, by warrant,
commit the person to prison.

(2) If the person, upon being brought before the Court at or


before the adjourned or postponed trial, again refuses to do what is so
required of him, the Court may, if it thinks fit, again adjourn or
postpone the trial of the cause and commit him in like manner, and so
again from time to time until he consents to do what is so required of
him.
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Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 77

(3) Every person who is guilty of the refusal or neglect aforesaid


shall also be liable, on the summary order of the Court, either in
addition to or in lieu of that punishment, to a fine of nineteen thousand
five hundred dollars, and, in default of payment, to imprisonment for
two months.

(4) Nothing in this section contained shall affect the liability of


the person to any other punishment or proceeding for refusing or
neglecting to do what is so required of him, or shall prevent the Court
from disposing of the case in the meantime, according to any other
sufficient evidence produced before it.

131. Every witness present when the trial or further trial of a case is Non-atten-
adjourned, or who has been duly notified of the time to which it is so dance of
adjourned, shall be bound to attend at that time, and, in default of so witness at
adjourned trial.
doing, may be dealt with in the same manner as if he had failed to attend
before the Court in obedience to a subpoena to attend and give
evidence.

132. (1) Where the trial of any cause is postponed from one sitting of Procedure with
the Court to another sitting, the Court may respite the recognisance of respect to
witnesses
every witness bound by recognisance to attend the first-mentioned where trial is
sitting, and that witness shall be bound to attend to give evidence at the postponed.
other sitting without entering into any fresh recognisance for that
purpose, in the same manner as if he was originally bound by his
recognisance to attend and give evidence at the other sitting.

(2) The Registrar shall deliver or cause to be delivered to every


witness in any case so postponed a notice in writing informing him of
the day on which the sitting of the Court to which the cause is
postponed will commence and of the manner in which he can ascertain
the day on which the cause will be tried.

Remuneration of Witness

133. (1) Every person who attends any sitting of the Court as a Remuneration
witness for the prosecution shall be entitled at the conclusion of the and travelling
case and after his account has been duly taxed by the Registrar, expenses of
whether he has been examined or not, to such sums for his attendance witnesses.
[31 of 1930]
and his travelling expenses as are mentioned in the Sixth Schedule.

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78 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

(2) A witness for the defence—

(a) who has given evidence at a preliminary inquiry and


attends in pursuance of a recognisance; or
(b) who attends in obedience to a subpoena or by virtue of
a warrant and gives evidence, if a reasonable explanation is
given to the Court or a judge why he was not examined at the
preliminary inquiry and the Court or a judge certifies that his
evidence is material and he has attended in the interests of
justice, or
(c) who attends in obedience to a subpoena or by virtue of
a warrant but has not given evidence, if a reasonable
explanation is given to the Court or a judge why he was not
examined at the preliminary inquiry and the Court or a judge
certifies that he has attended at the trial in the interests of
justice,

shall be entitled to be allowed and paid his allowance and travelling


expenses after his account has been taxed by the Registrar as aforesaid.

(3) The judge may, if he thinks fit, order that the payment of any
sum to any witness mentioned in the two preceding subsections be
disallowed.

(4) Every witness who has received a notice in writing as


hereinbefore mentioned shall produce it to the Registrar when his
account is being taxed.

(5) On presentation of a taxed account to any officer for the time


being directed by the Minister responsible for finance, it shall be paid
out of the moneys provided by Parliament.

(6) No claim made by a witness for any sum aforesaid shall be


entertained unless the claim is made within one month after the last day
of the sitting of the Court in respect of which it is made.
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Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 79

TITLE 11—TRIAL

Records

134. (1) It shall not in any case be necessary to draw up a formal Form and
record of the proceedings on any trial for an indictable offence, but particulars of
minutes of
Registrar shall cause to be preserved all indictments, pleas, and
proceedings on
depositions filed with or delivered to him, and he shall keep a book, to trial.
be called “the State Book,” which shall be the property of the Court and
be deemed a record thereof.

(2) In the State Book shall be entered the name of the judge, and
a memorandum of the substance of all proceedings at every trial and of
the result of every trial; and any certificate of any indictment trial,
conviction, or acquittal, or of the substance thereof, shall be made up
from the memorandum in the book, and shall be receivable in evidence
for the same purpose and to the same extent as certificates of records,
or the substantial parts thereof, are by law receivable:

Provided always that nothing herein contained shall dispense with


the taking of notes by the judge presiding at the trial.

(3) Any erroneous or defective entry in the State Book may at


any time be amended by a judge in accordance with the fact.

135. The indictment, the plea or pleas thereto, the names of the Original
jurors, the verdict and the judgment or sentence of the Court shall form record of
proceedings.
and be the record of the proceedings in each cause and shall be kept and
preserved as of record in the registry.

136. It shall be the duty of the Registrar, whenever thereto required, Furnishing the
to furnish the Minister with copies of and extracts from all records, Minister with
minutes, and proceedings of the Court and all returns relating thereto copies of
records.
that the Minister may require.

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80 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

Arraignment

Bringing 137. If the accused person is at the time confined for some other
prisoner up for cause in any prison, the Court may, by order in writing, without writ of
arraignment.
habeas corpus, direct the keeper of the prison to bring up the body of
the accused, as often as may be required, for the purpose of the trial,
and the keeper shall obey the order.

Postponement 138. If an application is made to the Court by the accused person or


of trial. the Director of Public Prosecutions for a postponement of the trial, and
the Court is of opinion that the accused person ought to be allowed a
further time, either to prepare for his defence or otherwise, or that for
any reason it is advisable in the interests of justice, the Court may
postpone the trial, either to a later day in the same sitting of the Court,
or to the next subsequent sitting of the Court for the same county, as the
Court thinks fit, upon any terms as to bail or otherwise the Court deems
proper.

Arraignment 139. Every accused person, on being called upon to plead, shall be
of accused entitled to have the indictment on which he is to be tried read over to
person.
him.

Procedure on 140. Where an indictment contains a count charging the accused


indictment person with having been previously convicted, he shall not, at the time
containing
of his arraignment, be required to plead to it unless he pleads guilty to
count charging
previous the rest of the indictment, nor shall that count be mentioned to the jury
conviction. when the accused person is given in charge to them, or when they are
sworn, nor shall he be tried upon it if he is acquitted on the other counts;
but, if he is convicted on any other part of the indictment, he shall be
asked whether he has been previously convicted as alleged or not; and,
if he says that he has not or does not say that he has been so convicted,
the jury shall be charged to inquire into the matter as in other causes.

Proof of 141. Where upon the trial of an indictment it is proposed to prove


previous against the defendant the fact of a previous conviction—
conviction.
[21 of 1932]
(a) a copy of the conviction for the offence punishable on
summary conviction, or a certificate containing the
substance and effect only (omitting the formal part) of the
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Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 81

indictment and conviction for the indictable offence, or as


the case may be, purporting to be signed by the officer
having the custody of the records of the Court where the
offender was convicted, or
(b) production of a copy of a warrant of commitment
reciting the conviction purporting to be certified under the
hand of the keeper of a prison, or production of a register
kept under section 5 of the Prevention of Crimes Act c. 9:01
containing an entry of the conviction,

shall, upon proof of identity of the person, be sufficient evidence of the


conviction.

142. A certificate containing the substance and effect only (omitting Proof of
the formal part) of the indictment and trial for any indictable offence, previous trial
on trial for
purporting to be signed by the Registrar, shall, on the trial of any
perjury.
indictment for perjury or subornation of perjury, be sufficient evidence
of the trial of the previous indictment, without proof of the signature or
official character of the person appearing to have signed the certificate.

Plea

143. No plea in abatement shall be allowed after the commencement Abolition of


of this Act. pleas in
abatement.

144. (1) When the accused person is called upon to plead, he may Pleading and
plead either guilty or not guilty, or the special pleas hereinbefore refusal to
plead.
mentioned.

(2) If the accused person wilfully refuses to plead or will not


answer directly, the Court may, if it thinks fit, order the Registrar to
enter a plea of not guilty, and the plea so entered shall have the same
force and effect as if the accused person had actually so pleaded.

145. If the accused person pleads not guilty, he shall thereby without Effect of plea
any further form, be deemed to have put himself upon the country for of not guilty.
trial, and the Court shall order a jury for his trial accordingly.

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Recording 146. Every plea shall be entered by the Registrar on the back of the
plea. indictment or on a sheet of paper annexed thereto.

Abolition of 147. Where any person is indicted for treason or felony, the jury
inquiry as to empanelled to try him shall not be charged to inquire concerning his
property or
movable or immovable property, or whether he fled for the treason or
flight in
treason. felony.

Further Proceedings at Trial

Case for the 148. After the accused person has been given in charge to the jury, or
prosecution. when the jury have been sworn, counsel for the State may open the case
against the accused person, and adduce evidence in support of the
charge.

Case for the 149. The accused person or his counsel shall be allowed, if he thinks
defence. fit, to open his case, and, after the conclusion of the opening, the
accused person or his counsel shall be entitled to adduce evidence in
support of the defence, and, when all the evidence is concluded, to sum
up the evidence.

Right of reply. 150. Counsel for the State shall in all cases have the right to reply.

Procedure 151. (1) If, either before or during the trial of an accused person, it
where person appears to the Court that he has been guilty of an offence punishable on
is committed
for trial
summary conviction, the Court may either order that the cause shall be
through error. remitted to a magistrate with any directions it thinks proper, or allow
it to proceed, and, in case of conviction, impose any lawful and proper
punishment upon the person so convicted.

(2) It shall be the duty of a magistrate to obey any directions so


addressed to him.

Adjournment, 152. (1) If the Court is of opinion that the accused person is taken by
or discharge surprise, in a manner likely to be prejudicial to his defence, by the
of jury and
production on behalf of the State of a witness who has not made any
postponement,
of trial. deposition, and of the intention to produce whom the accused has not
had sufficient notice, or if the Court is of opinion that the State is
entitled to produce rebutting evidence, the Court may, on the
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Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 83

application of the accused person, or of the Director of Public


Prosecutions, as the case may be, adjourn the further trial of the cause,
or discharge the jury from giving a verdict and postpone the trial.

(2) If the Court is of opinion that any witness who is not called
for the prosecution ought to be so called, it may require the State to call
him, and, if the witness is not in attendance, may make an order that his
attendance be procured, and the Court may, if it thinks fit, adjourn the
further hearing of the cause to some other time during the sitting until
that witness attends.

(3) If, in that case, the Court is of opinion that it would be


conducive to the ends of justice to do so, it may, on the application of
the accused person or the Director of Public Prosecutions, discharge
the jury and postpone the trial.

153. The Court shall have full power and authority during any part of Recalling
the trial, or after the case on both sides has been closed, to call and witness.
examine any witness, whether produced before the Court in the course
of the trial or not.

154. When the case on both sides is closed, the judge shall, if Summing up.
necessary, sum up the law and evidence therein.

155. After the judge’s summing up, or, if there is no summing up, on Consideration
the conclusion of the case on both sides, the jury shall consider their of verdict.
verdict.

156. If the jury are not immediately prepared to return their verdict, Retirement of
they may, by the direction of the Court or otherwise, retire for the jury for
consideration
purpose of considering it, and in that case the Court shall direct that the
of verdict.
jury shall be kept together and proper provision made for preventing
them from holding communication with any person on the subject of
the trial.

157. (1) If the jury retire to consider their verdict, none other than the Communica-
tion with jury
officer of the Court who has charge of them shall be permitted to speak while in
to, or to communicate in any way with, any of them, without the leave retirement
considering
of the Court. verdict.

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84 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

(2) Disobedience to the directions of this section shall not affect


the validity of the proceedings:

Provided that, if the disobedience is discovered before the verdict


of the jury is returned, the Court may, if it is of opinion that the
disobedience has produced substantial mischief, discharge the jury,
and direct a new jury to be empanelled and sworn during the same
sitting of the Court, or may postpone the trial, on such terms as justice
may require.

Accommoda- 158. If the jury are not permitted to separate during an adjournment,
tion of jury and when the jury have retired to consider their verdict, the Court may
kept together give any directions it thinks fit with respect to their accommodation,
or in retire-
ment.
custody, and refreshment.

Number of 159. With respect to the deliberation and verdict of the jury, the
jurors required following provisions shall have effect:
to find verdict.
[20 of 1939]
(a) on the trial of a capital offence the verdict for that
offence shall be unanimous:

Provided that where a person is arraigned for any offence


punishable with death and the jury, by a majority of not less than ten,
find such person guilty of a lesser crime, then the finding of the
majority shall, subject to the provisions of paragraphs (b) and (c), be
taken as the verdict and sentence shall follow accordingly;

(b) on the trial of any offence other than a capital offence,


during the first and second hours after the jury begin to
consider their verdict, the verdict shall be unanimous; and
(c) on the trial of any offence other than a capital offence,
if, on the expiration of two hours from the time when the jury
begin to consider their verdict, they are agreed in the
proportion of eleven to one or ten to two, or, where the jury
consist of eleven jurors, in the proportion of ten to one, the
verdict of that majority shall be taken and have effect as the
verdict of the jury.
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Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 85

160. The verdict of the jury shall be delivered verbally by the Delivery of
foreman of the jury in open court and in the presence of the other jurors, verdict.
and when returned and accepted by the Court shall be entered by the Recording of
verdict.
Registrar on the back of the indictment or on a sheet of paper annexed
thereto, before the jury are discharged.

161. (l) If the jury find the accused person not guilty, he shall be Verdict of not
immediately discharged from custody on that indictment. guilty.

(2) If the accused person pleads guilty or if the jury find the Plea or verdict
accused person guilty, it shall be the duty of the Registrar to ask him of guilty,
whether he has anything to say why sentence should not be passed motion in
arrest of
upon him according to law; but the omission so to ask shall not affect judgment and
the validity of the proceedings. sentence.

162. (l) The accused person may, at any time before sentence, move Motion in
in arrest of judgment on the ground that the indictment does not (after arrest of
any amendment which the Court is willing and has power judgment.
to make) state any indictable offence.

(2) (a) If that motion is made, the Court may, in its


discretion, either hear and determine the matter during the
same sitting, or adjourn the hearing thereof to a future time
to be fixed for that purpose.
(b) If the Court decides in favour of the accused person, he
shall be discharged from that indictment.
(c) If the motion is not made, or if the Court decides against
the accused person upon the motion, the Court may either
sentence the accused person at any time during the same
sitting of the Court, or may, in its discretion, discharge him
on his own recognisance or on that of the sureties whom the
Court thinks fit, or both, to appear and receive judgment at
the same or some future sitting of the Court, or when called
upon.

163. The judgment or sentence of the Court shall be entered by the Recording
Registrar on the back of the indictment or on a sheet of paper annexed judgment.
thereto.

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86 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

Sentence of 164. Where any person is convicted of an offence punishable with


death. death, the Court shall thereupon pronounce sentence of death, and the
[9 of 1953]
sentence may be carried into execution, and all other proceedings
thereupon and in respect thereof may be had and taken, in the same
manner as sentence of death might have been pronounced and carried
into execution, and all other proceedings thereupon and in respect
thereof might have been had and taken, before the commencement of
this Act, on a conviction for any felony for which the person convicted
might have been sentenced to suffer death as a felon, but subject to this
Act:

Provided that sentence of death shall not be pronounced on or


recorded against a person convicted of an offence if it appears to the
Court that at the time when the offence was committed he was under
the age of eighteen years; but in lieu thereof the Court shall sentence
him to be detained during President’s pleasure; and if so sentenced he
shall be liable to be detained in such place and under such conditions
as the Minister may direct, and whilst so detained shall be deemed to
be in lawful custody.

Special 165. (1) No verdict of any jury against any person, and no sentence
provision for of the Court on any person found guilty of larceny, embezzlement,
saving validity
fraudulent application or disposition of anything, or obtaining any
of verdict in
cases of thing by false pretences, shall be set aside or reversed, if on the trial
larceny, there was evidence to prove that that person committed any one of
embezzlement those offences.
and the like.
(2) The punishment awarded against that person shall not
exceed the punishment which could have been awarded for the offence
actually committed, according to the proper legal designation thereof,
and no person so convicted shall be liable to be afterwards prosecuted
for any of those offences upon the same facts.

Abolition of 166. No confession, verdict, inquest, conviction, or judgment of or


attainder for for any treason, or felony, or felo de se shall cause any attainder or
forfeiture and
corruption of blood, or any forfeiture or escheat.
escheat.
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Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 87

167. Where a woman convicted of an offence punishable with death Sentence of


is found in accordance with this Act to be pregnant, the sentence to be death not to be
passed on
passed on her shall be a sentence of imprisonment for life instead of
pregnant
sentence of death. woman.
[21 of 1932]

168. (l) Where a woman convicted of an offence punishable with Procedure


death alleges that she is pregnant, or where the Court before whom a where woman
woman is so convicted thinks fit so to order, the question whether or convicted of
capital offence
not the woman is pregnant shall, before sentence is passed on her, be alleges she is
determined by a jury. pregnant.
[21 of 1932]
(2) Subject to this subsection, the said jury shall be the trial jury,
that is to say the jury to whom she was given in charge to be tried for
the offence, and the members of the jury need not be re-sworn:

Provided that—

(a) if any member of the trial jury, either before or after


conviction, dies or is discharged by the Court as being
through illness incapable of continuing to act or for any
other cause, the inquiry as to whether or not the woman is
pregnant shall proceed without him; and
(b) where there is no trial jury, or where a jury have
disagreed as to whether the woman is or is not pregnant, or
have been discharged by the Court without giving a verdict
on that question, the jury shall be constituted as if to try
whether or not she was fit to plead and shall be sworn in such
manner as the Court may direct.

(3) The question whether the woman is pregnant or not shall be


determined by the jury on such evidence as may be laid before them
either on the part of the woman or on the part of the State, and the jury
shall find that the woman is not pregnant unless it is proved
affirmatively to their satisfaction that she is pregnant.

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88 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

(4) The rights conferred by this section on a woman convicted


of an offence punishable with death shall be in substitution for the right
of such woman to allege in stay of execution that she is quick with child
and the last-mentioned right shall cease as from the 3rd May, 1932.

Where person 169. The Court may, if it thinks fit, take into consideration, when
convicted sentencing a person who has been convicted of an indictable offence,
wishes other
any other offence which such person admits that he has committed and
offences to be
taken into which he asks to be taken into consideration as aforesaid; and any
consideration. certificate issued as to such sentence shall contain a statement of the
[2 of 1948] offence or offences taken into consideration as aforesaid.

Adjournment 170. (l) From the time when the accused person is given in charge to
of trial. the jury or when the jury are sworn, the trial shall proceed
continuously, subject to the power of the Court to adjourn it.

(2) No formal adjournment of the Court shall hereafter be


required and no entry thereof in the State Book shall be necessary.

Mode of 171. (1) Upon any adjournment of a trial, the Court may in all cases,
dealing with if it thinks fit, direct that during the adjournment the jury shall be kept
jury on
together and proper provision made for preventing them from holding
adjournment
of trial. communication with any person on the subject of the trial; if the
direction is not given, the jury shall be permitted to separate.

(2) If the jury are permitted to separate, the Court shall


admonish them of their duty not to converse with any person or among
themselves on any subject connected with the trial, or to form or
express any opinion on the case until it is finally submitted to them.

Discharge of 172. (1) The Court may, in its discretion, in case of any emergency or
jury in certain casualty rendering it, in its opinion, expedient for the ends of justice to
special cases.
do so, discharge the jury without their giving a verdict, and direct a new
jury to be empanelled during the same sitting of the Court, or may
postpone the trial on such terms as justice may require.

(2) If the judge becomes incapable of trying the cause or


directing the jury to be discharged, the Registrar shall discharge the
jury.
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Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 89

(3) If one or more of the jurors, before they begin to consider


their verdict, becomes or become, in the opinion of the Court,
incapable of continuing to perform his or their duty, the Court may
either discharge the jury and direct a new jury to be empanelled during
the same sitting of the Court, or may postpone the trial, or may, in its
discretion and with the consent of counsel for the State and of the
accused person, in any case other than that of a capital offence, proceed
with the remaining jurors and take their verdict, which shall have the
same effect as the verdict of the whole number.

173. Whenever the trial of an accused person is postponed, the Court Effect on
may respite the recognisance of the accused person and his surety or recognisance
sureties (if any) accordingly, and in that case he shall be bound to of postpone-
ment of trial.
appear to be tried at the time and place to which the trial is postponed,
without entering into any fresh recognisance for that purpose, in the
same manner as if he were originally bound by his recognisance to
appear and be tried at the time and place to which the trial has been so
postponed.

174. (1) Every accused person shall be entitled to be present in Court Presence of
during the whole of his trial, unless he misconducts himself by so accused person
at trial.
interrupting the proceedings as to render their continuance in his
[21 of 1978]
presence impracticable.

(2) The Court may, if it thinks proper, permit the accused


person to be out of Court during the whole or any part of the trial on any
terms it deems right.

(3) Where an accused person absents himself or seeks to absent


himself from trial on the ground of illness the Court may order him to
submit himself for examination by a registered medical practitioner
designated by the Court in order to determine whether or not he is fit to
attend the trial and thereafter the Court may proceed with the trial in the
absence of the accused person if—

(a) he does not submit himself for the examination; or


(b) the Court, having considered the report of that
examination, together with any other report of any
registered medical practitioner tendered by the accused

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90 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

person and, if necessary, the testimony on oath of any


registered medical practitioner, is satisfied that the accused
person is capable of attending the trial.

Validity of 175. The taking of the verdict of the jury or other proceeding of the
proceedings on Court shall not be invalid by reason of its happening on Sunday.
Sunday.

Publication of 176. As soon as practicable after the conclusion of every sitting of


list of persons the Court, the Registrar shall publish in the Gazette and in one or more
convicted.
newspapers of Guyana a list containing the names of all persons
convicted at the sitting, the offences for which they were indicted, the
offences of which they were convicted, and the sentences of the Court
in their respective cases.

Arraignment and Trial of Insane Persons

Procedure 177. If any accused person appears, either before or on arraignment,


where person to be insane, the Court may order a jury to be empanelled to try the
indicted sanity of that person, and the jury shall thereupon, after hearing
appears on
arraignment or evidence for that purpose, find whether he is or is not insane and unfit
during trial, to to take his trial; but a verdict under this section shall not affect the trial
be insane. of any person so found to be insane for the offence for which he was
indicted, if he subsequently becomes of sound mind.

When accused 178. If, during the trial of any accused person, he appears, after the
found to be hearing of evidence to that effect or otherwise, to the jury charged with
insane jury not
to find verdict
the indictment, to be insane, the Court shall in that case direct the jury
on indictment. to abstain from finding a verdict upon the indictment, and, in lieu
thereof, to return a verdict that the accused is insane; but a verdict
under this section shall not affect the trial of any person so found to be
insane for the offence for which he was indicted, if he subsequently
becomes of sound mind.

Special verdict 179. Where in an indictment any act or omission is charged against
where accused any person as an offence, and it is given in evidence on the trial of that
person found
guilty, but
person for that offence that he was insane, so as not to be responsible,
insane at date according to law, for his actions at the time when the act was done or
the omission made, then, if it appears to the jury before whom the
person is tried that he did the act or made the omission charged, but was
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Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 91

insane as aforesaid at the time when he did or made it, the jury shall of act or
return a special verdict to the effect that the accused person was guilty omission
of the act or omission charged against him, but was insane as aforesaid charged.
at the time when he did the act or made the omission.

180. (1) Where any person is found to be insane under sections 177 Provision for
and 178, or has a special verdict found against him under the last custody of
accused person
preceding section, the Court shall direct the finding of the jury to be
found insane.
recorded, and thereupon may order the person to be detained in safe
custody, in such place and manner as the Court thinks fit, until the
President’s pleasure is known.

(2) The judge shall immediately report the finding of the jury Judge to report
and the detention to the Minister, who shall order the person to be dealt finding to the
Minister.
with as a lunatic under the laws of Guyana for the time being in force
for the care and custody of lunatics, or otherwise as he thinks proper.

PART IV

TITLE 12— EXECUTION AND SENTENCES

181. The execution of the sentence of the Court, other than a By whom
sentence of death, shall be carried into effect by an officer appointed sentences to be
executed.
for that purpose, and every sentence of imprisonment pronounced by
the Court shall take effect from the first day of the sitting at which it
was passed, unless otherwise ordered.

Imprisonment

182. Every person sentenced to imprisonment shall be imprisoned in Sentences of


one of the prisons of Guyana under the Prisons Act. imprisonment.
c. 11:01

Suffering Punishment

183. Where any person convicted of any felony not punishable with Effect of
death has suffered or shall suffer the punishment to which he has been undergoing
sentence for
or is sentenced therefor, the punishment so suffered has and shall have
felony not
the like effects and consequences as a pardon under the public seal as punishable
to the felony whereof the offender was or is so convicted: with death.

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92 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

Provided that nothing herein contained, nor suffering that


punishment, shall prevent or mitigate any punishment to which the
offender might otherwise be lawfully sentenced on a subsequent
conviction for any other felony.

Saving of 184. Nothing in this Act shall interfere with any power of the Court
powers of to order a person to be committed to or detained in any reformatory or
committal to
training school, or other similar institution.
reformatory.

Capital Punishment

Place where 185. (1) Judgment of death to be executed on a person sentenced to


judgment of death shall be carried into effect, within the walls of the prison in which
death to be
that person is confined at the time of execution.
executed.
[4 of 1972]
Immateriality (2) Nothing in any law or usage in Guyana shall be held or taken
of time and to constitute either the time or place of execution an essential part of
place of
any judgment of death pronounced by the Court upon any person
execution
mentioned in convicted of an offence punishable with death, so as to render the
judgment. judgment spent or vacated because that person was not executed at the
time or place appointed by the Court.

Persons to be 186. (1) The Director of Prisons, the keeper of the prison, and the
present at medical officer of the prison, and any other officers of the prison the
execution.
Director of Prisons requires, shall be present at the execution, and no
other person shall be required to be so present.

(2) Any justice of the peace, and those relatives of the person
sentenced, or other persons, whom the Director of Prisons thinks it
proper to admit within the prison for the purpose, may also be present
at the execution.

Post mortem 187. (1) As soon as may be after judgment of death has been
examination. executed on the person sentenced, the medical officer of the prison
Fourth
Schedule.
shall examine the body and ascertain the fact of death, and shall sign a
Form 19. certificate thereof and deliver it to the Director of Prisons.
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Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 93

(2) The Director of Prisons, the keeper of the prison, and those
officers and other persons present (if any) whom the Director of
Prisons requires or allows to do so, shall also sign a declaration to the Form 20.
effect that judgment of death has been executed on the person
sentenced.

188. (1) Every certificate and declaration mentioned in the Publication of


preceding section shall in each case be forthwith transmitted by the certificate and
Director of Prisons to the Minister; and copies certified by the Director declaration.
of Prisons of those several documents shall as soon as possible be
exhibited and for twenty-four hours at least be kept exhibited on or
near the principal entrance of the prison within which judgment of
death has been executed.

(2) Anyone who knowingly and wilfully signs any false Signing false
certificate or declaration required by this Title relating to capital certificate or
punishment shall be guilty of a misdemeanour and shall be liable to declaration.
imprisonment for two years.

189. The omission to comply with any provision of this Title relating Saving as to
to capital punishment shall not make the execution of judgment of non-compli-
ance with
death illegal in any case where it would otherwise have been legal.
directions.

190. The Minister may make any regulations he deems expedient for Making of
observance in every prison on the execution of judgment of death for regulations.
the purpose as well of guarding against any abuse in the execution,
as of giving greater solemnity thereto and of making known without
the prison walls the fact that the execution is taking place.

191. Except in so far as is in this Title otherwise provided, judgment General


of death shall be carried into effect in the same manner as if this Act had saving.
not passed.

192. Whenever the President is pleased to grant a pardon to any Commutation


person sentenced to death for any offence by law punishable with of sentence of
death, the President may, by warrant under his hand and the public seal, death.
order that that person shall be kept in imprisonment for his natural life
or for a term of years specified in the warrant; and that warrant shall be
as effectual in the law, and shall be carried to execution in the same

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94 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

manner, as if it had been a sentence of imprisonment for that term


pronounced by the Court against that person and recorded for an
offence in respect of which that sentence might have been pronounced
by the Court.

TITLE 13— MISCELLANEOUS MATTERS

Mode of 193. (1) Every prosecutor and every accused person may conduct his
conducting case on the preliminary inquiry before a magistrate in person, or by
case.
counsel, or by a solicitor, and every accused person may conduct his
case in the Court in person or by counsel.

(2) If a prosecutor or an accused person is in custody, his


counsel or solicitor shall be entitled to have access to him for the
purposes of the prosecution or of the defence, as the case may be,
subject to any restrictions and conditions imposed by the regulations of
the prison in which he is confined.

Ownership of Property

Mode of 194. (1) Where in any document in any proceeding under this Act it
stating is necessary to state the ownership of any property whatsoever,
ownership of
whether movable or immovable, which belongs to, or is in the
property of
partners. possession of, more than one person, it shall be sufficient to name one
of those persons, and to state the property to belong to the person so
named and another, or others, as the case may be.

(2) Where in the document it is necessary to mention for any


purpose whatsoever any partners or other joint owners or possessors, it
shall be sufficient to describe them in manner aforesaid.

(3) This section shall be construed to extend to all joint stock


companies and associations, societies, and trustees.

Mode of 195. Where in any document in any proceeding under this Act it is
stating necessary to state the ownership of any church, chapel, or building set
ownership of
place of
apart for religious worship, or of anything belonging to or being in it,
worship. it shall be sufficient to state that the church, chapel, building, or thing,
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 95

is the property of the clergyman, or of the officiating minister, or of the


churchwarden or churchwardens of the church, chapel, or building,
without its being necessary to name him or them.

196. Where in any document in any proceeding under this Act it is Mode of
necessary to state the ownership of any work or building, made, stating
erected, or maintained, either in whole or in part, at the expense of the ownership of
public
inhabitants of Guyana, or of any city, town, local government district property.
established under the Municipal and District Councils Act, or village [24 of 1969]
thereof, or of anything belonging to or being in or used in relation to the c. 28:01
work or building, or of anything provided for the use of the poor or of
any public institution or establishment, or of any materials or tools
provided or used for repairing the work or building or any public road
or highway, or of any other property whatsoever, whether movable or
immovable, of the inhabitants aforesaid, it shall be sufficient to state
that that property is the property of the inhabitants of Guyana, or of the
city, town, local government district established under the Municipal
and District Councils Act, or village, as the case may be, without
naming any of them.

197. (1) Every married woman shall have in her own name against Criminal
all persons whatsoever, including her husband (subject as regards her remedies of
married
husband to the proviso hereafter in this section contained) the same
woman against
remedies and redress, by way of criminal proceedings, for the her husband
protection and security of her own separate property as if that property and others in
belonged to her as an unmarried woman. respect of
property.
(2) In any indictment or other proceeding under this section, it
shall be sufficient to allege the property to which the indictment or
other proceeding relates to be the property of the married woman:

Provided that no proceeding shall be taken by any wife against her


husband by virtue of this section, while they are living together as to or
concerning any property claimed by her, or while they are living apart
as to or concerning any act done by the husband while they were living
together, concerning property claimed by the wife, unless that property
has been wrongfully taken by the husband when leaving or deserting
his wife, or about to leave or desert her.

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96 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

Criminal 198. A wife who does any act with respect to any property of her
liability of husband which, if done by the husband with respect to property of the
wife to
wife, would make the husband liable to criminal proceedings by the
husband.
wife under the preceding section, shall in like manner be liable to
criminal proceedings by her husband.

Arrest

Summary 199. (1) Any person found committing any indictable offence may
apprehension be apprehended by anyone without warrant, and anyone may, without
of offenders in warrant, arrest the person if that offence has actually been committed,
certain cases.
or if the person arrested is being pursued by hue and cry, but not
otherwise.

(2) Anyone to whom any property is offered to be sold, pawned,


or delivered, and who has reasonable ground to suspect that an
indictable offence has been or is about to be committed thereon or with
respect thereto, may, and, if he can, shall, without warrant, apprehend
the person offering the property, and take possession of the property so
offered.

(3) Everyone who finds any person in possession of property


which he, on reasonable grounds, suspects to have been obtained by
any indictable offence, may arrest that person without warrant and take
possession of the property.

(4) Everyone who arrests any person under any of the


provisions in this section contained shall (if the person making the
arrest is not himself a peace officer) deliver the person so arrested to
some police or other constable, in order that he may be conveyed as
soon as reasonably may be before a magistrate, to be by the magistrate
dealt with according to law, or himself convey him before a magistrate
as soon as reasonably may be.

c. 16:01 (5) Nothing in this section shall affect the powers of


apprehension conferred upon constables by the Police Act.
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Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 97

200. (1) Every warrant for the apprehension of any person, issued Form and
under this Act, or, unless the contrary is expressly provided, under any requisites of
warrant of
other statute for the time being in force relating to indictable offences,
apprehension.
shall be dated of the day on which it is issued, and shall be signed by the
magistrate or judge by whom it is issued.

(2) The warrant shall not be signed in blank, nor shall it be


issued by a magistrate without an information or other statement in
writing and upon oath.

(3) The warrant—

(a) may be directed either to any police or other constable


by name, or to the police or other constable and all other
police and other constables, or generally to all police and

other constables, or, in the case of a warrant issued by the


Court, to the Registrar and all marshals;
(b) may be executed by any police or other constable
named therein, or by any one of the police or other
constables to whom it is directed, or by the Registrar or any
marshal, as the case may be; and
(c) shall state concisely the offence or matter for which it
is issued, shall name or otherwise describe the person to be
arrested, and shall order the police or other constable or
constables to whom it is directed to apprehend that person,
and bring him before a magistrate or before the Court or a
judge, as the case may be, to answer to the offence or matter
contained in the information or statement aforesaid, and to
be further dealt with according to law.

(4) It shall not be necessary to make the warrant returnable at


any particular time, but it shall remain in force until it is executed.

201. (1) Every warrant of apprehension may be issued and executed Execution of
on a Sunday. warrant.

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

98 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

(2) The police or other constable, or the marshal, executing the


warrant must, before making the arrest, inform the person to be
arrested that there is a warrant for his apprehension, unless there is
reasonable cause for abstaining from giving that information on the
ground that it is likely to occasion escape, resistance, or rescue.

(3) Subject to the provision hereafter in this section contained,


it shall not be necessary for the police or other constable, or the
marshal, executing the warrant to have it in his possession; but if he has
it, he must, on request, show it to the person arrested or to be arrested.

(4) Every person arrested on the warrant shall be brought before


a magistrate, or before the Court or a judge, as the case may be, as soon
as is practicable after he is so arrested.

(5) Any police or other constable, or the marshal, authorised to


execute the warrant may, for the purpose of executing it, either with or
without assistance from any other person or persons, break open and
enter any house, building, or enclosed place, if admittance cannot
otherwise be obtained:

Provided that in that case he must be in possession of the warrant,


and before so doing he must, as far as practicable, notify that
possession.

Handcuffing 202. A person arrested, whether with or without warrant, shall not be
person handcuffed or otherwise bound except in case of necessity, or of
arrested.
reasonable apprehension of violence, or of attempt to escape or to
rescue, or by order of the Court or a judge, or of a magistrate.

Police station 203. Every police station shall be deemed to be a lock-up house
to be lock-up. where persons charged with indictable offences may be received and
detained according to law.

Seizure and Restitution of Property

Seizure of 204. (1) Any magistrate, or the Court, may order the seizure or
property the attachment of any property which there is reason to believe has been
proceeds of obtained by, or is the proceeds of, any indictable offence, or into which
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 99

the proceeds of any indictable offence have been converted, and may indictable
direct that the property shall be kept or sold, and that it, or the proceeds offence.
[21 of 1978]
thereof if sold, shall be held as the magistrate or the Court directs, until
some person establishes, to the magistrate’s or the Court’s satisfaction,
a right thereto, and if no person establishes the right within twelve
months from the seizure or attachment, the property, or the proceeds
thereof, shall become vested in the Accountant General for the public
use and be disposed of accordingly.

(2) Any magistrate, or the Court, may order the seizure of any Seizure of
instruments, materials, or things which there is reason to believe are things
intended to be
provided or prepared, or being prepared, with a view to the used in
commission of any indictable offence, and may direct them to be held commission of
and dealt with in the same manner as property seized under the indictable
preceding subsection. offence.

(3) An order made under either of the two preceding Enforcement


subsections may be enforced by a search warrant under this Act. of order of
seizure.
(4) Prior to an order being made under subsection (1) directing
that immovable property be attached, notice of the proceedings
therefor shall be served on such persons whom the magistrate or the
Court considers to have an interest in or right over the property and
upon the Registrar of Deeds.

(5) Any person who has been served with a notice pursuant to
subsection (4) or any other person whom the magistrate or the Court is
satisfied has an interest in or right over the property attached may
appear before the magistrate or the Court and show cause why the
property should not be attached and the magistrate or the Court may
thereafter make such order as he or it sees fit.

(6) Where directions have been given under subsection (1) that
property be sold such directions shall not, except when the property is
a live animal, bird or fish or is perishable, be carried out until—

(a) the period specified in that subsection has expired; or


(b) the period allowed for making an appeal against the
order has expired; or

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100 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

(c) where such an appeal is duly made, until the appeal has
been finally determined or abandoned, whichever is the
latest event:

Provided that, other than in those matters for which exceptions are
made by the foregoing provisions, an order made under subsection (1)
shall have effect as an order for the retention of the property by the
State pending the disposal of any appeal which may have been filed
against it and for that purpose the magistrate or the Court may as he or
it sees fit direct that such steps be taken to ensure the safe custody of the
property including any income arising therefrom.

(7) For so long as an order made under subsection (1) or any


proceedings thereunder subsist the Registrar of Deeds, notwithstand-
ing anything to the contrary in any other law, shall not give effect to any
transaction affecting any property the subject matter of the order.

(8) Nothing in this section shall be deemed to confer any power


on a magistrate or the Court to order the seizure or attachment of any
property in the possession of, or held in the name of, a bona fide
purchaser for value who could not have been reasonably aware that
such property was obtained by or was the proceeds of an indictable
offence.

(9) Where any property which is sought to be attached or seized


under subsection (1) is shown to have been purchased in the name of,
or to have come into possession of, a person or his spouse, children or
other dependants after the commission of an indictable offence of
which that person is convicted and if, in proceedings instituted under
this section within the period of ten years after the date of the
commission of the offence, it is alleged that the proceeds of the subject
matter of the offence were wholly or partly converted into that
property, it shall be presumed until the contrary is shown that the
property was obtained by or was the proceeds of the offence.

(10) In this section any reference to property having been


obtained by, or being the proceeds of, an indictable offence or into
which the proceeds of any indictable offence have been converted is a
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Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 101

reference to property the value whereof at the time of its acquisition


bears in the opinion of the magistrate or the Court a substantial ratio to
the proceeds.

205. If, on the apprehension of any person charged with an indictable Report of
offence, any property is taken from him, a report shall be made by the property found
upon person
police to the magistrate or the Court of that fact and of the particulars
apprehended.
of the property.

206. If, on the apprehension of any person charged with an indictable Application of
offence, any money is taken from him, the Court may, in its discretion, money found
in case of his conviction, order the money, or any part thereof, to be upon person
apprehended.
applied to the payment of any costs, or costs and compensation,
directed to be paid by him.

207. (1) Subject as hereinafter provided, where anyone is convicted Restitution of


of an indictable offence, any property found in his possession, or in the property in
case of
possession of another for him, may be ordered by the Court to be
conviction.
delivered to the person who appears to the Court to be entitled thereto.

(2)(a) Where anyone is convicted before the Court of having


stolen or dishonestly obtained any property, and it appears
to the Court that the property has been pawned to a
pawnbroker or other person, the Court may order the
delivery thereof to the person who appears to the Court to
be the owner, either on payment or without payment to the
pawnbroker or other person of the amount of the loan or
any part thereof, as to the Court, in all the circumstances of
the case, seems just.
(b) If the person in whose favour that order is made pays
the money to the pawnbroker or other person thereunder,
and obtains the property, he shall not afterwards question the
validity of the pawn; but, save to that extent, no order made
under this section shall have any further effect than to
change the possession, nor shall it prejudice any right of
property or right of action in respect to property existing or
acquired in the goods either before or after the offence was
committed.

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102 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

(3) Nothing in this section shall prevent any magistrate or the


Court from ordering the return to anyone charged with an indictable
offence, or to any person named by the Court, of any property found in
the possession of the person so charged or in the possession of any
other person for him, or of any portion thereof, if the magistrate or the
Court is of opinion that that property, or portion thereof, can be
returned consistently with the interests of justice and with the safe
custody or otherwise of the person so charged.

Restitution of 208. Where anyone is convicted of larceny or of any other offence


stolen property which includes the stealing of any property, and it appears to the Court
by purchaser that the convict has sold the stolen property to any person and that the
thereof.
purchaser had no knowledge that it was stolen, and any moneys have
been taken from the convict on his apprehension, the Court, on the
application of the purchaser and on the restitution of the stolen
property to the person injured, may order that, out of those moneys, a
sum not exceeding the proceeds of the sale be delivered to the
purchaser.

Enforcing Recognisance

Preparation of 209. (1) The Registrar shall, before the close of the last day’s sitting
list of persons of the Court on each occasion of its sitting, make out a list of all persons
making default
on
bound by recognisance to appear or to do any other thing, or who have
recognisances. been bound for the appearance of any other person or his doing any
other thing, at that sitting of the Court and have made default, or whose
principal, or other person for whom they are so bound, has made
default to appear or to do that other thing at that sitting of the Court; and
the Registrar shall, if he is able to do so, state the cause why the default
has been made.

(2) The list so made out shall be examined, and, if necessary,


corrected, and signed by the judge, and shall be delivered by the
Registrar to the marshal.

Issue of writ of (3) A writ of execution shall be issued from the registry against
execution. every person so liable on a recognisance in respect of the default, and
Fourth
Schedule. shall be delivered to the marshal; and that writ shall be the authority of
Form 14. the marshal for levying and recovering the forfeited recognisance on
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 103

the movable and immovable property of that person, and for taking his
body into custody if sufficient movable or immovable property is not
found whereon levy may be made.

(4) Every person arrested under the preceding subsection shall Apprehension
be committed to prison and be there kept until the next sitting of the and detention
of person
Court for the same county, there to abide the decision of the Court,
making
unless, in the meantime, the forfeited recognisance, or a sum of money default, where
in lieu or satisfaction thereof, is paid, together with all costs and recognisance is
expenses in consequence of his arrest and detention; but if any person unsatisfied.
so arrested and imprisoned gives to the marshal good and sufficient
bail for his appearance at the next sitting of the Court to abide the
decision of the Court and for the payment of the forfeited recognisance
or of a sum of money in lieu or satisfaction thereof, together with any
costs awarded by the Court, then the marshal is hereby required
forthwith to cause the person to be discharged out of custody.

(5) If the person fails to appear at the next sitting of the Court in Failure of the
pursuance of his undertaking in that behalf, the Court may order that a person, when
released, to
writ of execution be issued from the registry against the surety or
appear at next
sureties of the person so bound as aforesaid, and the writ shall be sitting of the
delivered to the marshal, who shall proceed as therein directed: Court.

Provided that the Court may, in its discretion, order the discharge
of the whole or any part of the forfeited recognisance, or of the sum of
money paid or to be paid in lieu or satisfaction thereof.

Fines, Forfeitures and Contempts

210. (1) The marshal shall, without further warrant or authority, Proceedings
arrest and detain in custody in a prison anyone upon whom a fine has against person
fined by the
been imposed by the Court, or by whom any forfeiture has been
Court.
incurred, and who is adjudged to pay it by the Court, until the fine or
forfeiture imposed on or incurred by him is paid and satisfied, together
with all costs and expenses in consequence of his arrest and detention:

Provided that—

(a) the imprisonment shall not exceed twelve months in


duration; and

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

104 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

(b) a judge may at any time order the discharge of the


prisoner.

(2) The return of the marshal, or of the keeper of the prison to


any writ of habeas corpus of an arrest or detainer under any judgment
or order of the Court for non-payment of any fine or forfeiture imposed
or incurred as aforesaid, shall be deemed sufficient in law, if there
appears in or is attached to that return a certificate by the Registrar,
setting forth the judgment or order by virtue of which the arrest or
detainer was made.

(3) The Court or a judge shall have power to reduce or remit any
fine or forfeiture imposed by the Court or incurred by any person in
respect of the Court, at any time within three months after it has been
imposed or incurred, provided it has not been already paid or satisfied.

Pardon

Effect of 211. No conditional pardon granted by the President to any person


conditional convicted of a felony, nor the performance of the condition thereof,
pardon to shall prevent or mitigate the punishment to which that person might
convicted
felon.
otherwise be lawfully sentenced on a subsequent conviction for any
[4 of 1972] other felony.

Power of the 212. The Court may, with the consent in writing of the Director of
Court to grant Public Prosecutions, order that a pardon be granted to any person
conditional
accused or suspected of, or committed for trial for, an indictable
pardon.
offence, on condition of his giving full and true evidence on any
preliminary inquiry or any trial; and that order shall have effect as a
pardon by the President, but may be withdrawn by the Court on proof
satisfying it that the person has withheld evidence or given false
evidence.

Effect of 213. Wherever either a free or conditional pardon is granted to any


pardon. person, the discharge of the offender in the case of a free pardon, and
the performance of the condition in the case of a conditional pardon,
shall have the same effect as a pardon has in the like cases under the
public seal.
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 105

214. (1) Whenever the President is pleased to grant to any offender a Recording
pardon under the public seal, or to issue any warrant for the pardon or
commutation of any sentence of death, the Registrar shall be bound, on warrant of
communica-
the direction of the President, to record that pardon and that warrant in tion.
a book to be kept by him for that purpose, and to endorse the pardon and
warrant with the word “Recorded” and with his signature.

(2) The pardon and warrant, when so recorded, and endorsed,


shall be valid and effectual for all purposes whatsoever, and it shall be
the duty of all courts, judges, officers, and others, on production
thereof, to take notice thereof and to give effect thereto.

215. (1) The President may remit in whole or in part, any sum of Power of
money imposed as penalty and as costs, charges and expenses in President to
remit fine or to
connection with the penalty on any person convicted of an indictable
release
offence although the money may be in whole or in part due and offender
payable, or has already been paid, to the State for the public use or to imprisoned for
some party other than the State, and may exercise his powers of pardon non-payment
in favour of any person who may be imprisoned for nonpayment of any thereof.
[4 of 1972]
sum of money so imposed, although the money may be in whole or in
part payable to the State for the public use or to some party other than
the State.

(2) The President may order the restoration of anything


forfeited, seized or detained in connection with an indictable offence.

(3) Every remission or restoration aforesaid may be made in the


manner and subject to the terms and conditions the President sees fit to
direct.

216. Everyone who accepts or acquiesces in the remission aforesaid Effect of


shall be thereby debarred from having, maintaining, or continuing any acquiescence
in remission.
action or suit in respect of any matter to which the remission relates,
and no further proceedings shall be taken against that person in relation
to that matter.

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

106 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

Error and some other matters

Prohibition of 217. No proceeding in error shall be taken upon any trial under this
proceeding in Act.
error.

Remuneration 218. (1) Every interpreter before the Court shall be allowed the
of interpreter. remuneration for his services taxed by the Registrar as fair and
reasonable, subject to any direction of the Court.

(2) Such remuneration shall be paid out of moneys provided by


Parliament.

(3) No claim made by an interpreter for any sum aforesaid shall


be entertained unless it is made within one month after the last day of
the sitting of the Court in respect of which it is made.

Payment of 219. (l) Where any person is convicted of an indictable offence, the
costs by Court may order him to pay the costs of the prosecution in addition to
convicted
person.
any sentence passed upon him.

(2) The order, on being filed in the Court on its civil side, shall
have the same effect as a judgment of the Court.

(3) The order shall not affect the claim of any witness to be paid
his costs, allowances, or expenses as hereinbefore provided.

Matters 220. Nothing in this Act relating to pleading or procedure shall apply
excepted from to or affect any information or indictment for any common nuisance,
the Act.
other than a common nuisance which endangers the lives, safety, or
health of the public, or injures the person of any individual; but that
information or indictment may be filed or preferred as if this Act had
not been passed.

Procedure on 221. The practice and procedure in respect of any charge of or trial
charge of or for treason or misprision of treason shall be as nearly as possible, the
trial for
same as the practice and procedure in respect of a charge of or trial for
treason.
[O. 15/1970] murder.
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 107

222. The forms contained in the Second and Fourth Schedules may, Use of forms.
with any variations and additions required by the circumstances of any Second and
Fourth
particular case be used in the cases to which they respectively apply
Schedules.
and, when so used, shall be good and sufficient in law:

Provided that nothing in this section shall affect the use of any
special forms of process in respect of any indictable offences given by
any statute relating to those offences.

223. Subject to negative resolution of the National Assembly, the Power to


Minister may by order from time to time amend the provisions of the amend Third
and Sixth
Third or the Sixth Schedule.
Schedules.
[27 of 1931]
_____________

FIRST SCHEDULE s. 21
[22 of 1961
O. 37/1966A
Persons exempted from service as Jurors
15/1970]

The Judges of the Supreme Court of Judicature.


Members of the Legislature.
The Mayor of Georgetown.
The Mayor of New Amsterdam.
Members of the Service Commissions.
Members of any military forces raised in any Common-
wealth territory by the government of such territory.
The President’s private secretary.
Public Officers.
Consuls and diplomatic or consular officers of any foreign
government.
Ministers of Religion and members of religious orders
provided they follow no secular occupation.
Barristers and solicitors in practice and their clerks.
Registered medical and dental practitioners in practice.
Registered pharmacists.
Nurses practising their profession.
Registered sick-nurses and dispensers.
Overseers of local authorities.
Members of the Special Constabulary.

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

108 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

The following officers of the Georgetown City Council

The Town Clerk.


The Accountant.
The City Engineer.
The Clerk of Markets.
The Medical Officer of Health.
The Chief Public Health Inspector.

The following officers of the New Amsterdam Town Council

The Town Clerk.


The Accountant.
The Town Superintendent.
The Town Engineer.
The Chief Public Health Inspector.

The following officers of the Georgetown Sewerage and Water


Commissioners

The Chief Engineer.


The Assistant Engineer.

_________

s. 222 SECOND SCHEDULE

FORMS RELATING TO JURIES AND JURORS

FORMS

s. 24 1.

Jury List

List of persons qualified and liable to serve as jurors in the


county of .............for the year 19.....
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 109

Juror’s Place Title, Nature Situation of


name: of quality, of immovable property Remarks
surname— abode calling, or qualification and nature of
forename business interest

2. s. 29

Summons to juror

IN THE HIGH COURT OF GUYANA.


(CRIMINAL JURISDICTION.)
County of..............................
To Mr.........................
You are hereby required to be and attend at the sitting of the High
Court for the said county to be held at ....................on ................ day,
the...............day of ............... l9............ , at................in the forenoon,
there and then to serve as a juror, and not to depart without leave of
the Court or in due course of law.
Herein fail not, or you will be liable to such fine as the Court may
award.
Dated this..................day of ........................ 19 ..........
(Signed).....................................
Marshal.

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

110 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

s.32 3.
Challenge to array

IN THE HIGH COURT OF GUYANA.


(CRIMINAL JURISDICTION.)
County of.....................
The State,
v.
C.D.
The Director of Public Prosecutions, who prosecutes for the
State [or the said C.D., as the case may be], challenges the array of the
panel on the ground that it was returned by E.F., Registrar of the
Supreme Court, and that the said E.F. was guilty of partiality [or fraud,
or wilful misconduct] in returning the said panel.

s.38 4.

IN THE HIGH COURT OF GUYANA.


(CRIMINAL JURISDICTION.)
County of .............................
The State,
v.
C.D.
The Director of Public Prosecutions, who prosecutes for the State
[or the said C.D., as the case may be], challenges J.K on the ground that
his name does not appear in the jurors’ book for the said county [or that
he is not indifferent between the State and the said C.D., or as the case
may be].

s. 42 5.

Oath of juror

1.—In case of felony

You shall well and truly try and true deliverance make between the
State of Guyana and the prisoner [or prisoners] at the bar, whom you
shall have in charge, and a true verdict give according to the evidence.
—So help you God.
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 111

2.—In case of misdemeanour

You shall well and truly try the issue joined between the State of
Guyana and the defendant [or defendants], and a true verdict give
according to the evidence.—So help you God.

6. s. 42

Affirmation of juror

I, A.B., do solemnly, sincerely, and truly affirm and declare that


the taking of an oath is, according to my religious belief, unlawful; and
I do also solemnly, sincerely, and truly affirm and declare that I will as
in last form to “evidence.”

_______________

s. 43 THIRD SCHEDULE
[21 of 1968
6 of 1997] REMUNERATION OF JURORS

For each day that a juror is obliged to be absent from his home in
the course of attending at the Court, he shall be entitled to be paid—

(a) a fee of two hundred and sixty dollars where the period of
his absence exceeds two and one-half hours;
(b) a fee of one hundred and thirty dollars where the period
of his absence does not exceed two and one-half hours;

Provided that no juror shall be paid any such fee unless he proves
to the satisfaction of the Registrar that by reason of his attendance at
the Court he has actually suffered loss in income but any juror who
resides more than one mile from the place where the Court is held shall
be entitled to be paid a reasonable sum not exceeding one hundred and
twenty dollars in respect of any expenses incurred by him each day for
sustenance as the Registrar may determine.

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

112 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

TRAVELLING EXPENSES

In addition to the payments to which he is entitled by virtue of the


foregoing provisions of this Schedule, each juror residing more than
one mile from the place where the Court is held shall be entitled to be
paid such actual and necessary travelling expenses as he may prove to
the satisfaction of the Registrar that he has reasonably incurred in
travelling to and returning from the Court.

JUROR UNABLE TO RETURN HOME AT ADJOURNMENT OF COURT


OR END OF TRIAL

If a juror satisfies the Registrar that by reason of the lack or


inadequacy of facilities for transportation he was unable to return to his
home at the final adjournment of the Court on any day or at the end of
a trial he shall be allowed such reasonable expenses for lodging and
sustenance as he may prove to the satisfaction of the Registrar that he
has necessarily incurred.
__________

s. 222 FOURTH SCHEDULE


[O. 22/1961]

FORMS FOR USE IN PROCEEDINGS RELATING TO INDICTABLE OFFENCES

Table of Forms

PART I.—PROOFS:

1. Information upon oath.


2. Deposition of witness.
3. Statement of accused person.

PART II.—PROCESS TO ENFORCE APPEARANCE:

4. Summons to witness under section 50.


5. Summons to accused person or witness.
6. Return of service by a bailiff or constable.
7. Warrant of apprehension of accused person or witness.
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 113

8. Notice to witness bound over.


9. Warrant of apprehension where accused person on bail has
absconded.

PART III.—BAIL:

10. Certificate of consent to bail by committing magistrate


endorsed on commitment.
11. The like on a separate paper.

PART IV.—RECOGNISANCES:
12. Recognisance to appear, etc.
13. Recognisance of witness examined under section 50.
14. Writ of execution for enforcement of forfeited recogni-
sance.

PART V.—WARRANTS
15. Warrant to commit [or detain] accused person for trial, etc.
16. Warrant to convey accused person before the magistrate of
another district.
17. Warrant to discharge accused person from prison.
18. Search warrant.

PART VI.—CAPITAL PUNISHMENT.

19. Certificate of medical officer of prison.


20. Declaration of Director of Prisons and others.

PART VII.—MISCELLANEOUS FORMS.

21. Notice of intention to take deposition of witness.


22. Receipt for prisoner.

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

114 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

PART I

PROOFS

FORMS

s. 51 1.

Information upon Oath

...............................DISTRICT.
The information of A.B., of ....................who saith upon his oath
(1) Or, (1) ..................................that (2) ..........................(3) ...........................
affirmation. Taken before me this day ...................of............................19 ........., at
(2) State
................................in the said district.
concisely the
substance of (Signed)..............................
the informa- ........................Magistrate, ...................District
tion. NOTE—The informant may be bound to give evidence by the following form of
(3) Add, for recognisance at foot of his information:—
the arrest of a And the said informant binds himself to attend at the next sitting of the High
witness— Court in its criminal jurisdiction for the county of ................ to be held at
And he further ..................... on the..............day of.................19......., to give evidence against the
saith that E.F., said C.D for the said offence; or otherwise to forfeit to the State the sum of
of can give Signed ..................................
material Deponent.
evidence, but .
is not likely to
attend
voluntarily [or Taken before me this ............................day of ........................19.................., at
and wilfully ...............................in the said district.
avoids .....................................
personal (Signed) ...........................
service of the ...................Magistrate,.......................Distnct.
summons].
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 115

2. s. 65 and s. 75

Deposition of witness

..........................DISTRICT.

The deposition of E.F.,of ........................taken in the presence of


C.D., who stands charged [or after notice to C.D., who stands com-
mitted] for that (l)...........................The said deponent saith on his oath (1) State
(2) ................................. as follows: (3) ............................................... concisely the
substance of
[If depositions of several witnesses are taken at the same time, they the charge.
may be taken and signed as follows:—] (2) Or,
The depositions of E.F., of ................G.H., of ........................J.K., affirmation.
of .........................etc., taken in the presence and hearing of C.D., who (3) Deposition
as nearly as
stands charged for that (1)......................................................................
possible in the
The deponent E.F. saith on his oath (2)................ as follows:(3) ......... words of the
The deponent G.H.saith on his oath (2)................as follows:(3).......... witness, to be
The deponent J.K saith on his oath (2).................as follows:(3).......... signed by him
[The signature of the magistrate may be appended as follows:—] and by the
magistrate.
The foregoing deposition of E.F. was taken before me in the
presence and hearing of C.D., and signed by the said E.F. in his
presence. In witness whereof I have, in the presence of the said C.D.,
signed my name, this.................day of.........................19.........
(Signed).....................
..................Magistrate, ........................District.

NOTE.—The informant or witness may be bound to give evidence by the


following form of recognisance at foot of his deposition:—
And the said deponent binds himself to attend at the next sitting of the High Court
in its criminal jurisdiction for the county of.................to be held at......................on the
.................day of......................19........., to give evidence against [or for] the said C.D.
for the said offence, or otherwise to forfeit to the State the sum of
(Signed).................................
Deponent.
Taken before me this ...................... 19.........., at .............day of ....... in the said
district.
(Signed).....................
....................Magistrate,...................... District.

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

116 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

s. 66 3.

Statement of accused person

................................DISTRICT.
A charge having been made against C.D. before the undersigned
(1) State magistrate for that (l) ........................and the said charge having been
concisely the read to the said C.D., and the witnesses for the prosecution having
substance of been severally examined in his presence, the said C.D. is addressed
the charge.
(2) Statement by me as follows:—”Do you wish to say anything in answer to the
of accused charge? You are not obliged to say anything, unless you desire to do
person in his so, but whatever you say will be taken down in writing and may be
very words, or given in evidence upon your trial”; whereupon the said C.D. makes
as nearly so as
possible, and
the following statement: (2)..................................................................
to be signed by Taken before me this .............day of ................................19........,
him, if he will. at ...........................in the said district.
(Signed)...........................
.......................Magistrate, ......................District.

PART II

PROCESS TO ENFORCE APPEARANCE

s. 49 4.

Summons to witness under section 50

...............................DISTRICT.
To ..............................of........................................................................

(1) State Whereas there is reason to believe that (l) ....................and you are
concisely the capable of giving material evidence concerning the same:—This is to
substance of
command you to appear at ...........o clock ..........m., on .................day,
the offence.
the ................day of ....................19........, at ...............before the magi-
strate of the said district, to be examined upon oath concerning that
offence.
Dated this ................day of ......................19........
(Signed).......................
.................Magistrate, ......................District.
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 117

5. s. 52 and s. 60

Summons to accused person or witness

....................................DISTRICT.
To.............................. of .........................................................................
Whereas information has been laid before me, the undersigned
magistratrate for the said district, for that (l).............................This is (1) State
to command you to appear as (2).........................on the hearing of the concisely the
substance of
said information at..............o’clock .........m., on.......day, the........day the charge.
of.............19 ............., at....................before the magistrate of the said (2) Insert:—
district. an accused
Dated this.........day of.....................19 .......... person, or, a
witness.
(Signed) ...........................
.........................Magistrate,..................District.

6. s. 52

Return of service by a bailiff or constable

In the..................................Magisterial District Magistrate’s


Court..............................Between..........................................................
Plaintiff.
........................................................................ Complainant, or
Informant.
..................................................and........................................................
I, (1) ................................................., (2) ...........................................
hereby certify that on the ..................day of ............................19.......,
at (3)...................................I served (4).............................................., a
true copy of which is hereto annexed, on (5) .......................................
of (6).............................................. by (7)............................................
Dated this..................day of .............................. 19.............
(Signed)..................................
(1) Full names.
(2) Official position (bailiff, police or other constable, etc.).
(3) Place where process served.
(4) State nature of process served (summons, order, etc.).
(5) Name of person on whom process served.
(6) Address of person served.
(7) State mode of service.

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

118 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

(1) State s.53 7.


concisely the
substance of
Warrant of apprehension of accused person or witness
the informa-
tion.
(2) If the case ............................. ..DISTRICT.
is so, add:— To .........................Police [or other] Constable.
for accused Whereas information has this day been laid before me, the under-
person:—
whereas a
signed magistrate for the...................district, for that C.D. (1).............
summons has ................................................................................................................
been issued to and (2) ..................................................................................................
C.D. [the
accused
person] or E.F.
[a witness] and
C.D. [or E.F.]
has neglected
to apear in
obedience to
the summons
and oath has
been made of
the service of
the summons.
For witness:–
whereas oath
has been made
that E.F. can
give material
evidence, but
is not likely to
attend
voluntarily; or,
whereas oath
has been made
that E.F.
wilfully avoids This is to command you forthwith to apprehend the said (3)............
personal ....................of..........................and to bring him before the magistrate
service of a of the said district, to answer the said information.
summons. Dated this.............day of ...................19..........
(3) Person
against whom
(Signed)....................
warrant is ........................Magistrate, ..................District.
issued.
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 119

8. s. 75

Notice to witness bound over

IN THE HIGH COURT OF GUYANA.


(CRIMINAL JURISDICTION.)
County of ....................................
The State,
v.
C.D.
To.................................of ............................ a witness for the..................
Take notice that the above-mentioned case will be tried at the next
sitting of the said Court for the said county to be held at......................
on the...................day of ........................19............; that you are bound
to attend the trial; and that you can find out the day fixed for the trial
by inquiring at any magistrate’s court or police station in the said
county on or after the..................day of...........................19........
Dated this............day of.......................19 ................
(Signed)..........................
.....................Magistrate,......................District.

9. s. 83

Warrant of apprehension where accused person on bail has absconded

...........................District
To.............................police [or other] constable.
Whereas C.D., who stands charged before me at.........................was
admitted to bail to appear at...........o’clock..........m., on................day,
the......................day of.................19........., at ...........................and has
made default therein:—This is to command you, etc. (as in form 7).

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

120 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

PART III

BAIL

s. 87 10.

Certificate of consent to bail by committing magistrate endorsed on


commitment

............................DISTRICT.
I hereby certify that I consent to the within-named C.D. being
bailed by recognisance, himself in .......................and [two] sureties in
.......................each.
Dated this..................day of......................19...........
(Signed).......................
.................Magistrate,..................District.

s. 87 11.

The like on a separate paper

..............................DISTRICT.
Whereas C.D. was, on the............day of .........................19..........
committed by me to the.............prison charged with (1)......................
I hereby certify that I consent to the said C.D. being bailed
by recognisance, himself in ...............and [two] sureties in.....................
.............................each.

Dated this..........day of........................19...............


(Signed)........................
................Magistrate,.....................District
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 121

PART IV

RECOGNISANCES (State
NOTE.—In all recognisances there must be given the name and surname of the person concisely the
bound, his occupation or profession (if any) and the place of his residence. substance of
the charge, or,
12. s. 75, 82, 83 and 85 if an accused
person is
remanded,
Recognisance to appear recite—
Whereas C.D.
.............................DISTRICT. stands charged
before me for
Whereas (1).....................................................................................
that
and
the hearing of
the said charge
has been
[adjourned or
interrupted].
(2) Obliga-
tion:—
to attend at
o’clock,
.m., on
day, the
day of
19 , at
The undersigned L.M. binds himself to perform the following or,
to attend at the
obligations viz.: (2) ................................................................................. next sitting of
the High Court
in its criminal
jurisdiction for
the county
of
or otherwise to forfeit to the State the sum of..................................... be held at
[or if bound over with sureties]:— on the
The undersigned L.M., the principal party to this recognisance, day of
hereby binds himself to perform the following obligation, viz. (2)...... 19 , to
give evidence
against the
said C.D.; or,
to appear
personally
before the
High Court in

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

122 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

its criminal And the said principal party, together with the undersigned
jurisdiction at sureties hereby severally acknowledge themselves bound to forfeit to
its next sitting
the State the sums following, viz., the said principal party the sum of
for the county
of ............... ........ and the said sureties the sum of ........................each, in
to be case the said principal party fails to perform the above obligation.
held at (Signed)..............................
on the day L.M.[occupation or profession, if any] of [place of residence]
of 19 ,
there and then,
principal party
or at any time N.O.[occupation or profession, if any] of [place of residence]
within twelve P.Q.[occupation or profession, if any]of [place of residence] sureties.
months from (Signed) ..................................
the date of this
..................Magistrate, .....................District.
recognisance
to answer any
indictment that
may be filed s. 49 13.
against him in
the said court
and to not
Recognisance of witness examined under section 49.
depart the said
court without ........................... DISTRICT.
leave of the Whereas E.F. was examined before me as a witness under section
court, and to
49 of the Criminal Law (Procedure) Act:— The undersigned E.F.
accept service
of the said hereby binds himself to perform the following obligation, that is to say,
indictment and that he will attend and give evidence before any magistrate or before
of all other the High Court in its criminal jurisdiction at any sitting held for the
documents at county of ....................if called upon for that purpose, at any time
prison;
or,
within twelve months next ensuing; And the said E.F. acknowledges
to keep the himself bound to forfeit to the State the sum of ..................... in case he
peace [and be fails to perform the said obligation.
of good (Signed) .........................................
behaviour]
E.F. [occupation or profession, if any] of [place of residence]
towards the
State and all Taken before me this................day of..................19........
its citizens, (Signed).......................................
and especially .........................Magistrate, ..................District.
towards A.B.
for the space
of or,
(in the case of
a reward or
adjournment)
to appear at
the time to
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 123

which the
hearing is
adjourned, or
at an earlier
date, if so
required.
c. 10:01

14. s. 209

Writ of execution for enforcement of forfeited recognisance.

IN THE HIGH COURT OF GUYANA.


(CRIMINAL JURISDICTION.)
The State of Guyana
His Excellency the President of Guyana
To..............................Registrar.
You are commanded that of the movable and immovable property
of C.D., of ..................you cause to be levied the sum of........... which
said sum of money the said C.D. was, by an order of the said Court,
bearing date the................day of..................19................ , adjudged to
pay in respect of a certain recognisance forfeited by him, and, in case
you cannot find sufficient movable and immovable property of the
said C.D., then you are to take the body of the said C.D., and lodge
him in the.......................prison, there to await the decision of our said
Court at its sitting next thereafter to be held for the county of................
......................unless the said C.D. shall give sufficient security for his
appearance at the said Court, for which you will be answerable; and
have you then and there this writ.
Witness the Honourable Mr. Justice...................this .....................
................day of.....................19...............
By order,
(Signed)..............................
........................Registrar.

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

124 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

PART V

WARRANTS

15 s. 72 and s. 74

Warrant to commit [or detain] accused person or refractory witness.


..............................DISTRICT.
(1) State To...........................police [or other] constable.
concisely the Whereas a charge was made on the...........day of ....................19........,
substance of upon the oath of A.B. [or A.B. and others, as the case may be] for that
the charge.
(2) Recitals:— C.D. (1)....................................................................................................
Trial:— and (2) ....................................................................................................
Whereas I am
of opinion that
a prima facie
case has been
made out
against the
said C.D.
Adjourn-
ment:—
whereas the
hearing of the
said charge
has been
adjourned to
the day of
19 , at
or,
whereas the
hearing of the
said charge
was adjourned,
etc., and the
said C.D. was
admitted to
bail to appear
on that day, or
at an earlier
date, if so
required, and This is to command you forthwith to lodge the said (3)..................
whereas the of...................in the...........................prison, there to be imprisoned by
said C.D. was
summoned to the keeper (4).........................................................................................
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 125

And for this the present warrant shall be a sufficient authority to all attend on the
whom it may concern. day of
Dated this................day of............................ 19................ 19 , but did
not appear
(Signed).......................... according to
.................Magistrate,................District. his
recognisance.
Remand on
arrest.—
whereas the
said C.D. has
been brought
before me
under a
warrant of
apprehension,
and the said
charge is to be
heard on the
day of 19 ,
at
Refractory
witness:—
whereas E.F.,
a material
witness, has,
without just
excuse,
refused to
make oath as a
witness or, to
answer certain
questions, or
to enter into a
recognisance
to give
evidence on
the trial of the
said C.D. in
that behalf.
(3) Name of
person to be
committed.
(4) Period of
imprison-
ment:—
For trial:—
until his trial,

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

126 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

or until he
shall be
discharged in
due course of
law.
For witness:—
until the trial
of the said
C.D. unless he
shall in the
meantime
enter into such
recognisance
as required (or,
until the
day of 19 ,
unless he shall
in the
meantime
consent to
answer as
required).
For adjourn-
ment:—
until the
above time of
adjournment
(or, hearing),
or such earlier
day as he may
be required
upon, when he
shall have him
at the above
place.

s.57 16.

Warrant to convey accused person before the magistrate of another


district

...............................DISTRICT.
To...........................police [or other] constable.
Whereas information has been laid before me, the undersigned
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 127

magistrate for the.....................district, for that C.D. (1)....................... (1) State


And whereas I have taken the deposition of A.B. as to the said concisely the
substance of
offence; And whereas the charge is of an offence committed in the
the informa-
.................................district:—This is to command you to convey the tion.
said C.D., of ......................................before the magistrate of the last-
mentioned district, and to deliver to him this warrant and the said
deposition.
Dated this.............day of.................19...........
(Signed)..............................
..................Magistrate,................ District.

17. s. 87

Warrant to discharge accused person from prison

................................DISTRICT.
To the Keeper of ................................... prison
Whereas a charge was made that C.D. (1)....................and whereas (1) State
...........................of .........................(2)....................................................... concisely the
substance of
This is to command you to take the recognisance of the said C.D. the charge.
in the sum of ...................... to appear for that purpose, and then to (2) Recitals—
discharge the said C.D unless he shall be in your custody for some for accused
other cause. person:—
Dated this...............day of.........................19................. was committed
to take his trial
(Signed).............................. for the said
..............Magistrate,................... District. offence, but
has now duly
entered into a
recognisance
to appear for
that pur-
pose:—
for witness:—
was committed
for refusing to
enter into a
recognisance
to attend and
give evidence
on the trial of
the said C.D.

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

128 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

for the said


offence, but
has now done
so:—
or, the said
C.D. for want
of evidence,
has not been
bailed or
committed:—
or, two sure-
ties have duly
entered into
recognisances
for his
attendance for
that purpose.

s. 49 18.

Search Warrant

....................................DISTRICT.
To................................police [or other] constable.
Whereas it appears, upon the oath of A.B., of ......................... that
(1) Insert there is reason to suspect that (1)..............................are concealed in
description of ...............................at ............................:—This is therefore to authorise
the things to and require you to enter, between the hours of .............and ................
be searched
for, and of the into the said premises, and to search for the said things, and to bring
offence in the same before me or some other magistrate.
respect of Dated this................day of............. 19..............
which the (Signed).................................
search is
made.
................Magistrate,..................District.

NOTE.—The warrant must be executed between 5 a.m. and 8 p.m. unless the
magistrate otherwise directs.
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 129

PART VI

CAPITAL PUNISHMENT

19. s. 187

Certificate of Medical Officer of Prison

I...............Medical Officer [or as the case may be] of the ...............


prison, hereby certify that I this day examined the body of....................
...................on whom judgment of death was this day executed in the
said prison, and that, on that examination, I found that the said..............
..................was dead.
Dated this ................day of.......................19..........
(Signed)..............................
Medical officer of.......................Prison.

20. s. 187

Declaration of Superintendent of Prisons and others

We, the undersigned, hereby declare that judgment of death was


this day executed on ..........................in the ........................... prison in
our presence.
Dated this............day of........ .....................19...........

(Signed)........................
Superintendent of Prisons.
Justice of the Peace.
Keeper of
etc., etc., etc.,

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

130 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

PART VII

MISCELLANEOUS FORMS

21. s.77

Notice of intention to take deposition of witness

To C.D., of........................
Take notice that, whereas it has been proved upon the oath of.........
(1)Insert name .....................of ...................... before (1) ...........that (2)..........................
and district of is able to give evidence tending to prove the guilt of the accused
Magistrate.
person, the examination of the said ..............................will be taken at
(2) Insert
name and full ...........o’clock ............m., on...............day, the............day of ............
description of 19............, at.....................on which occasion, if you think proper, you,
witness. your counsel or solicitor, may attend and cross-examine the said..........
..............................and take notice that, whether you attend or not, the
deposition then taken of the said..................................may be given in
evidence at the trial, notwithstanding your absence from the examin-
ation.
Dated this...............day of .........................19............
(Signed)..............................

A.B.
s. 86 22.

Receipt for prisoner

(1)Rank, etc. I hereby certify that I have received from R.S. (l)......................of
....................the body of C.D., together with a warrant under the hand
of...............Esquire, magistrate of the................................ district, and
(2) Sober or as that the said prisoner was (2)...................at the time he was delivered
the case may into my custody.
be.
Dated this......... day of .......................19..........
(Signed).........................
Keeper of .........................Prison.
_________
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 131

FIFTH SCHEDULE s. 94
[2 of 1948]
RULES

1. (1) An indictment may be on parchment or durable paper, and Material, etc.,


may be either written or printed, or partly written or partly printed. for indict-
ments.

(2) Each sheet on which an indictment is set out shall be not


more than fourteen and not less than six inches in length, and not more
than ten and not less than seven inches in width, and if more than one
sheet is required the sheets shall be fastened together in book form.

(3) A proper margin not less than three inches in width shall be
kept on the left-hand side of each sheet.

(4) Figures and abbreviations may be used as in an indictment


for expressing anything which is commonly expressed thereby.

(5) An indictment shall not be open to objection by reason only


of any failure to comply with this rule.

2.The commencement of the indictment shall be in the following Commence-


form: ment of the
indictment.
The State v. A.B.

In the High Court of Guyana.


(Criminal Jurisdiction.)
County of........................... Presentment of the Director of
Public Prosecutions of Guyana. A.B. is charged with the following
offence (offences):—

3. Charges for any offences, whether felonies or misdemeanours, Joining of


may be joined in the same indictment if those charges are founded on charges in one
indictment.
the same facts, or form or are a part of a series of offences of the same
or a similar character.

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

132 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

Mode in which 4. (1) A description of the offence charged in an indictment, or,


offences are to where more than one offence is charged in an indictment, of each
be charged. offence so charged, shall be set out in the indictment in a separate
paragraph called a count.

(2) A count of an indictment shall commence with a statement


of the offence charged, called the statement of offence.

(3) The statement of offence shall describe the offence shortly


in ordinary language, avoiding as far as possible the use of technical
terms, and without necessarily stating all the essential elements of the
offence, and shall contain a reference to the section of the Act under
which the charge is laid.

(4) After the statement of the offence, particulars of it 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 or any statute limits the
particulars of an offence required to be given in an indictment, nothing
in this rule shall require any more particulars to be given than those so
required.

Appendix. (5) The forms set out in the Appendix to these Rules, or forms
conforming therewith as nearly as may be, shall be used in cases to
which they are applicable, and in other cases forms to the like effect, or
conforming therewith as nearly as may be, shall be used, the statement
of offence and the particulars of offence being varied according to the
circumstances in each case.

(6) Where an indictment contains more than one count, the


counts shall be numbered consecutively.

Provisions as 5. (1) Where an enactment constituting an offence states the


to statutory offence to be the doing or the omission to do any one of any different
offences.
acts in the alternative, or the doing or the omission to do any act in
any one of any different capacities, or with any one of any different
intentions, or states any part of the offence in the alternative, the acts,
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 133

omissions, capacities, or intentions or other matters stated in the


alternative in the enactments, may be stated in the alternative in the
count charging the offence.

(2) It shall not be necessary, in any count charging a statutory


offence, to negative any exception, or exemption from, or qualification
to, the operation of the statute creating the offence.

6. (1) The description of property in a count in an indictment shall Description of


be in ordinary language and such as to indicate with reasonable property.
clearness the property referred to, and if the property is so described
it shall not be necessary (except when required for the purpose of
describing an offence depending on any special ownership of property
or special value of property) to name the person to whom the property
belongs or the value of the property.

(2) Where property is vested in more than one person, and the
owners of the property are referred to in an indictment, it shall be
sufficient to describe the property as owned by one of those persons by
name with others, and if the persons owning the property are a body of
persons with a collective name, such as “inhabitants,” “trustees,”
“commissioners,” or “club,” or other collective name, it shall be
sufficient to use that name without naming any individual.

7. The description or designation in an indictment of the accused Description of


person or of any other person to whom reference is made therein, persons.
shall be such as is reasonably sufficient to identify him, without
necessarily stating his correct name, or his abode, style, degree, or
occupation; and if, owing to the name of the person not being known,
or for any other reason, it is impracticable to give that description or
designation, such description or designation shall be given as is
reasonably practicable in the circumstances, or the person may be
described as “a person unknown.”

8. Where it is necessary to refer to any document or instrument in Description of


an indictment, it shall be sufficient to describe it by any name or document.
designation by which it is usually known, or by the purport thereof,
without setting out any copy thereof.

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

134 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

General rule as 9. Subject to any other provisions of these Rules it shall be


to description. sufficient to describe any place, time, thing, matter, act, or omission
whatsoever, to which it is necessary to refer in any indictment, in
ordinary language in such a manner as to indicate with reasonable
clearness that place, time, thing, matter, act, or omission.

Statement of 10. It shall not be necessary in stating any intent to defraud,


intent. deceive, or injure, to state an intent to defraud, deceive or injure any
particular person, where the statute creating the offence does not make
an intent to defraud, deceive, or injure a particular person an essential
ingredient of the offence.

Charge of 11. Any charge of a previous conviction of an offence, or of being


previous an habitual criminal or an habitual drunkard, shall be charged at the
conviction,
end of the indictment by means of a statement, in the case of a
habitual
criminal or previous conviction that the person accused has been previously
drunkard. convicted of that offence at a certain time and place without stating the
particulars of the offence, and in the case of an habitual criminal or
habitual drunkard, that the offender is an habitual criminal or an
habitual drunkard, as the case may be.

Citation. 12. These rules may be cited as the Indictment Rules, and, together
with any rules made under section 95 of this Act, may be cited
together by any collective title prescribed by the last mentioned rules.

APPENDIX TO RULES

FORMS OF INDTCTMENT

1.

STATEMENT OF OFFENCE

Murder, contrary to section 100 of the Criminal Law (Offences)


Act.
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 135

PARTICULARS OF OFFENCE

A.B. on the .........................day of.............................19.................


murdered J.S.

2.

STATEMENT OF OFFENCE

Accessory after the fact to murder, contrary to section 105 of the


Criminal Law (Offences) Act.

PARTICULARS OF OFFENCE

A.B. well knowing that H.C. had murdered O.C. did on the.......day
of...........................and on other days thereafter, receive, comfort,
harbour, assist, and maintain the said H.C.

3.

STATEMENT OF OFFENCE

Manslaughter, contrary to section 94 of the Criminal Law


(Offences) Act.

PARTICULARS OF OFFENCE

A.B., on the.........................day of................................unlawfully


killed J.S.
4.

STATEMENT OF OFFENCE

Rape, contrary to section 76 of the Criminal Law (Offences) Act.

PARTICULARS OF OFFENCE

A.B., on the..........................day of.......................................had carnal


knowledge of E.F., without her consent.

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

136 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

5.

STATEMENT OF OFFENCE

First count

Wounding with intent, contrary to section 57 of the Criminal Law


(Offences) Act.

PARTICULARS OF OFFENCE

A.B., on the...................day of......................................wounded


C.D. with intent to do him grievous bodily harm, or to maim, dis-
figure, or disable him, or to resist the lawful apprehension of him the
said A.B.

STATEMENT OF OFFENCE

Second count

Wounding, contrary to section 50 of the Criminal Law (Offences)


Act.

PARTICULARS OF OFFENCE

A.B., on the.............................day of .............................................


maliciously wounded C.D.

6.

STATEMENT OF OFFENCE

Cruelty to a child, contrary to section 92 of the Criminal Law


(Offences) Act.
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 137

PARTICULARS OF OFFENCE

A.B., between the.....................day of...............and the..................


.....................day of.................................being the guardian of C.D., a
child, ill-treated or neglected the said child, in a manner likely to
cause the said child unnecessary suffering or injury to its health.

7.

STATEMENT OF OFFENCE

Larceny, contrary to section 184 of the Criminal Law (Offences)


Act.

PARTICULARS OF OFFENCE

A.B., on the...............day of......................................., being clerk


or servant to M.N., stole from the said M.N. ten yards of cloth.

8.

STATEMENT OF OFFENCE

Robbery with violence, contrary to section 222 of the Criminal


Law (Offences) Act.

PARTICULARS OF OFFENCE

A.B., on the.....................day of...................................robbed C.D.


of a watch, and at the time of or immediately before or immediately
after that robbery did use personal violence to the said C.D.

9.

STATEMENT OF OFFENCE
First count

Larceny, contrary to section 164 (or 167, as the case may be) of the
Criminal Law (Offences) Act.

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

138 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

PARTICULARS OF OFFENCE

A.B., on the.......................day of ............................stole a bag the


property of C.D.

STATEMENT OF OFFENCE

Second count

Receiving stolen goods contrary to section 236 of the Criminal


Law (Offences) Act.

PARTICULARS OF OFFENCE

A.B., on the.........................day of.............................did receive a


bag, the property of C.D., knowing the same to have been stolen.
A.B., has been previously convicted of felony, to wit, burglary, on
the.................day of ..........................at the ...........................................
Supreme Criminal Court.
10.

STATEMENT OF OFFENCE

Burglary and larceny, contrary to section 228 of the Criminal Law


(Offences) Act.

PARTICULARS OF OFFENCE

A.B., in the night of the...............day of.........................................


did break and enter the dwelling-house of C.D., with intent to steal
therein, and did steal therein one watch, the property of S.T., the said
watch being of the value of one hundred and fifty dollars.

11.

STATEMENT OF OFFENCE

Sending threatening letter, contrary to section 42 of the Criminal


Law (Offences) Act.
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 139

PARTICULARS OF OFFENCE

A.B., on the............day of........................................sent, delivered


or uttered to, or caused to be received by C.D., a letter accusing or
threatening to accuse the said C.D., of an infamous crime with intent
to extort money from the said C.D.

12.

STATEMENT OF OFFENCE

Obtaining goods by false pretences, contrary to section 194 of the


Criminal Law (Offences) Act.

PARTICULARS OF OFFENCE

A.B., on the..................day of...................................with intent to


defraud, obtained from S.P. five yards of cloth by falsely pretending
that he, the said A.B., was a servant to J.S., and that he, the said A.B.
had then been sent by the said J.S. to S.P., for the said cloth, and that he
the said A.B., was then authorised by the said J.S. to receive the said
cloth on behalf of the said J.S.

13.

STATEMENT OF OFFENCE

Conspiracy to defraud, contrary to section 33 of the Criminal Law


(Offences) Act.

PARTICULARS OF OFFENCE

A.B., and C.D. on divers days between the......................................


day of ...............................and the .....................day of ........................
conspired together with other persons unknown to defraud such
persons as should thereafter be induced to part with money to the
said A.B. and C.D. by false representations that A.B. and C.D. were
then carrying on a genuine business as jewellers at.........................and
that they were then willing and prepared to supply articles of jewellery
to those persons.

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

140 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

14.

STATEMENT OF OFFENCE

First count

Arson, contrary to section 14O of the Criminal Law (Offences)


Act.

PARTICULARS OF OFFENCE

A.B., on the............................day of ...............................................


...........................................................maliciously set fire to a dwelling
house, one F.G. being therein.

STATEMENT OF OFFENCE

Second count

Arson, contrary to section 141 of the Criminal Law (Offences)


Act.

PARTICULARS OF OFFENCE

A.B., on the..............................day of ........................ maliciously


set fire to a house with intent to injure or defraud.

15.

STATEMENT OF OFFENCES

A.B., arson, contrary to section 141 of the Criminal Law


(Offences) Act. C.D., accessory before the fact to same offence,
contrary to the Criminal Law (Offences) Act, section 25.

PARTICULARS OF OFFENCES

A.B., on the.......................day of ........................set fire to a house


with intent to injure or defraud.
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 141

C.D., on the same day,.................................................did counsel,


procure, and command the said A.B. to commit the said offence.

16.

STATEMENT OF OFFENCE

First count

Offence under section 128 of the Criminal Law (Offences) Act.

PARTICULARS OF OFFENCE

A.B., on the.........................day of .................................displaced


a sleeper belonging to the..........................railway with intent to
obstruct, upset, overthrow, destroy, or damage any engine, tender,
carriage or truck using the said railway.

STATEMENT OF OFFENCE

Second count

Obstructing railway, contrary to section 129 of the Criminal Law


(Offences) Act.

PARTICULARS OF OFFENCE

A.B., on the...........................day of............................in the county


of............................................................................................................
by unlawfully displacing a sleeper belonging to the.................railway
did obstruct or cause to be obstructed an engine or carriage using the
said railway.

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

142 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

17.

STATEMENT OF OFFENCE
First count

Forgery, contrary to section 255 of the Criminal Law (Offences)


Act.

PARTICULARS OF OFFENCE

A.B., on the.....................day of.................................in the county


of .........................with intent to defraud, forged a certain will purport
ing to be the will of C.D.

STATEMENT OF OFFENCE

Second count

Uttering forged document, contrary to section 254 of the Criminal


Law (Offences) Act.

PARTICULARS OF OFFENCE

A.B., on the ...................day of .................................in the county


of.......................uttered a certain forged will purporting to be the will
of C.D., knowing the same to be forged and with intent to defraud.

18.

STATEMENT OF OFFENCE

Uttering counterfeit coin, contrary to section 298 of the Criminal


Law (Offences) Act.

PARTICULARS OF OFFENCE

A.B., on the............................day of...................................at the public


house called “The Red Lion” in the county of .......................uttered a
counterfeit half-crown, knowing the same to be counterfeit.
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 143

19.

STATEMENT OF OFFENCE

Perjury, contrary to section 324 of the Criminal Law (Offences)


Act.

PARTICULARS OF OFFENCE

A.B., on the.........................day of.............................in the county


of ..............................being a witness upon the trial of an action in the
court in which one.....................was plaintiff, and one..........................
was defendant, knowingly, falsely swore that he saw one M.N. in the
street called.................., on the.................day of ..................................

20.

STATEMENT OF OFFENCE

Libel, contrary to section 113 of the Criminal Law (Offences) Act.

PARTICULARS OF OFFENCE

A.B., on the..........................day of.............................in the county


of..........................published a defamatory libel concerning E.F., in the
form of a letter [book, pamphlet, picture, or as the case may be]
[innuendo should be stated where necessary.]

21.

STATEMENT OF OFFENCE

First count

Publishing obscene libel, contrary to section 350 of the Criminal


Law (Offences) Act.

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

144 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

PARTICULARS OF OFFENCE

E.M., on the.....................day of................................in the county


of...........................published an obscene libel, the particulars of which
are deposited with this indictment.
[Particulars to specify pages and lines complained of where
necessary as in a book.]

22.

STATEMENT OF OFFENCE

A.B., undischarged insolvent obtaining credit, contrary to section


218 of the Criminal Law (Offences) Act.
C.D., being accessory to same offence, contrary to section 25 of
the Criminal Law (Offences) Act.

PARTICULARS OF OFFENCE

A.B., on the.....................day of.................................in the county


of..........................being an undischarged insolvent, obtained credit to
the extent of one hundred dollars:—from H.S. without informing the
said H.S. that he was an undischarged insolvent.
C.D., at the same time and place did aid, abet, counsel and procure
A.B. to commit the said offence.

23.

STATEMENT OF OFFENCE

First count

Falsification of accounts, contrary to section 208 of the Criminal


Law (Offences) Act.
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 145

PARTICULARS OF OFFENCE

A.B., on the.......................day of...............................in the county


of .....................................being clerk or servant to C.D., with intent to
defraud, made or concurred in making a false entry in a cash book
belonging to the said C.D., his employer, purporting to show that on
the said day one hundred dollars had been paid to L.M.

STATEMENT OF OFFENCE

Second count

Same as first count.

PARTICULARS OF OFFENCE.

A.B., on the....................day of..................................in the county


of...............................being clerk or servant to C.D., with intent to de-
fraud, omitted or concurred in omitting from or in a cash book
belonging to the said C.D., his employer, a material particular, that is
to say, the receipt on the said day of fifty dollars from H.S.

24.

STATEMBNT OF OFFENCE

First count

Fraudulent conversion of property, contrary to section 197(1)(a)


of the Criminal Law (Offences) Act.

PARTICULARS OF OFFENCE

A.B., on the......................day of................................in the county


of.....................fraudulently converted to his own use and benefit
certain property, that is to say, one hundred dollars entrusted to him
by H.S., in order that he, the said A.B., might retain the same in safe
custody.

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

146 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

STATEMENT OF OFFENCE

Second count

Fraudulent conversion of property, contrary to section 197(1)(b)


of the Criminal Law (Offences) Act.

PARTICULARS OF OFFENCE

A.B., on the.......................day of................................in the county


of............................fraudulently converted to his own use and benefit
certain property, that is to say, the sum of two hundred dollars
received by him for and on account of L.M.

____________

s. 133 SIXTH SCHEDULE


[O. in C.
56/1947 REMUNERATION OF WITNESSES
6 of 1997]
Each person in the following classes, for each day that person attends,
or is travelling to attend, or to return from, any trial, provided the
person is not in receipt of any salary or wages as a public officer or
servant in Guyana, shall be remunerated as follows:

1. Medical and legal practitioners, ministers of


religion, civil, mechanical and electrical engineers and
persons professionally qualified in other branches of
engineering, registered dentists, chartered accountants
and persons registered as public auditors under the
c. 89:01 Companies Act and other persons professionally
qualified, but not otherwise specified in this Schedule..... $325.00

2. Every merchant, attorney, director or manager of


a mercantile firm, estate proprietor, estate manager or
attorney................................................................................ 195.00
LAWS OF GUYANA

Criminal Law (Procedure) Cap. 10:01 147

3. Every architect, surveyor, building contractor,


chemist and druggist, auctioneer, manufacturer’s agent,
master of a sea-going vessel or other person similarly
employed............................................................................... 165.00

4. Every mercantile clerk, shop or store keeper, master


tradesman, estate overseer, mate of a seagoing vessel or
other person similarly employed......................................... 130.00

5. Every shop assistant, provision farmer, tradesman,


stevedore porter, estate superintendent or other person
similarly employed .............................................................. 100.00

6. Every pedlar, store porter, chauffeur, seamstress,


labourer on a timber grant, balata grant, placer or mining
claim, or other person similarly employed........................... 80.00

7. Every domestic servant, agricultural labourer,


gardener, huckster, groom or other person similarly
employed.............................................................................. 65.00

8. Every person between the ages of 6 and 16............. 35.00

9. Every person being the wife or unmarried daughter


of any person in the classes above mentioned, one half of
the allowance of that person, provided that such wife or
daughter is over the age of 16 years and is not in
employment.

10. Every person belonging to any class not specified 35.00

11. For qualifying to give evidence and for attendance


in court of expert scientific or other witness such sum as
may be fixed by the court not being less than $325.00 or
more than $3,250.00.

L.R.O. 3/1998
LAWS OF GUYANA

148 Cap. 10:01 Criminal Law (Procedure)

Note. ( l) A witness in classes I and 2 who resides within the boundaries of the City of
Georgetown, or within the boundaries of the Town of New Amsterdam, or within I
mile of the Court House at Suddie shall not receive any remuneration unless he
satisfies the Registrar that he has incurred loss by attending the court.
(2) In all cases a witness (including a public officer or servant when attending as a
witness in a matter not arising out of his official duties) shall be entitled to such actual
travelling and hotel expenses (where necessary) as the Registrar shall in each case
allow.

____________

s. 81 SEVENTH SCHEDULE
21 of 1932
FORM OF RETURN OF SERVICE OF NOTICE ON A PERSON COMMITTED FOR
TRIAL OR A WITNESS

The Criminal Law (Procedure) Act, Cap. 10:01, section 81.


The State v.

I(1) ..................................., (2)........................................ hereby certify


that on the..............day of .........................19............., at (3).................
I served a document of which the within document is a true copy on
(4)...............................of (5) ...........................by (6) ..................................
Dated this..........day of ........................... 19............

................................................
(Signature)

(1) Name in full.


(2) Police or other constable.
(3) Place where notice served.
(4) Name of person on whom served.
(5) Address of person served.
(6) Mode of service.

__________

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