Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
CHAND KHAN & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF UTTAR PRADESH
DATE OF JUDGMENT11/07/1995
BENCH:
MUKHERJEE M.K. (J)
BENCH:
MUKHERJEE M.K. (J)
ANAND, A.S. (J)
CITATION:
1995 AIR 2140 1995 SCC (5) 448
JT 1995 (5) 329 1995 SCALE (4)276
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
THE 11TH DAY OF JULY, 1995
Present:
Hon’ble Dr.Justice A.S.Anand
Hon’ble Mr.Justice M.K.Mukherjee
Mr.D.D.Thakur, Sr. Adv. Mr.Suman Kapoor, and Mr.Pankaj
Kalra, Advs. with him for the appellants.
Mr.Anis Ahmed Khan and Mr.A.S.Pundir, Advs. for the
Respondent.
J U D G M E N T
The following Judgment of the Court was delivered:
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CRIMINAL APPEAL NO. 716 OF 1991
Chand Khan and anr.
Versus
State of Uttar Pradesh
J U D G M E N T
M.K. MUKHERJEE. J.
Chand Khan and Shabbu, the two appellants before us,
and seven others were placed on trial before an Additional
Sessions Judge of Rampur to answer common charges under
Sections 452, 302/149, 325/149, 324/149 and 323/149 of the
Indian Penal Code (‘IPC’ for short). Against five of them,
including the two appellants, a charge under Section 148 IPC
and against the other four a charge under Section 147 IPC
were also framed. Besides, a separate charge under Section
302 IPC was framed against appellant Shabbu. The trial ended
in an order of acquittal recorded in favour of all the
persons araigned. Aggrieved thereby the State of Uttar
Pradesh preferred an appeal which was partly allowed by the
High Court by setting aside the acquittal of the two
appellants and three others. After setting aside their
acquittal the High Court convicted the two appellants for
the offence under Section 302 IPC as also for the other
offences for which they were charged and sentenced them to
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suffer imprisonment for life for the former conviction and
for the period already undergone for the other convictions.
The other three were convicted of all the charges levelled
against them except the one under Section 302/149 IPC and
sentenced to imprisonment for the period already undergone.
Assailing the above order of conviction and sentence only
the two appellants have filed this appeal invoking their
statutory right under Section 379 Criminal Procedure Code.
Facts which are not in dispute are that Shah Alam (the
deceased), his cousin Faheem Khan (P.W.6) and appellant
Chand Khan were carrying on business of Karchobi from two
separate workshops in Mohalla Gher Pipalwala within the
police station of Ganj. Aslam (P.W.7), a boy aged about 7/8
years, had been working for the appellant Chand Khan in his
business but a few days before the incident out of which the
present appeal arises he left his services and joined the
set-up of Faheem Khan. On May 26, 1977 at or about 1 P.M.
the two appellants and accused Ishtiaq Khan went to the
workshop of Faheem Khan and asked him to release Aslam so
that he could work with Chand Khan again. When Faheem Khan
refused to oblige they assaulted him. For that incident, he
lodged a complaint with the police the same afternoon.
However, according to the prosecution Shah Alam and Faheem
Khan used to carry on their above business jointly but as
adequate accommodation was not available at one and the same
place they were maintaining two workshops, one in the house
of one Allah Rakha Khan and the other in the terrace of Md.
Jama Khan.
The prosecution version of the incident is that on the
same night (on May 26, 1977) the two appellants along with
the other accused persons went to the house of Shah Alam to
teach him a lesson for the report his business partner
Faheem Khan had lodged against some of them earlier in the
afternoon for assaulting him. For that purpose the two
appellants went armed with Knives and the rest with other
weapons including danda. Shah Alam was then sitting on a cot
in the open space in front of his house along with Irshad
Khan, Babar Khan and Kaisher (P.W.2). Immediately after
entering the premises the accused persons started assaulting
them. Chand Khan gave two knife blows to Shah Alam and some
others hit Irshad Khan, Babar Khan and Kaisher Khan with
dandas. When the victims cried aloud, Keramat Ali Khan
(P.W.1), father of the deceased Shah Alam, who was inside
the house came out and some people from the mohalla
including Kallan Mian @ Mardan Mian (P.W.4) arrived there.
In the meantime some of the miscreants including Chand Khan
entered into the house of Keramat and assaulted his daughter
Sm. Naeema Parveen (P.W.5) and his sister-in-law Sm. Raees
Begum. When Sm. Naeema Parveen found that Chand Khan was
about to beat her mother she picked up a knife used for
cutting vegetables which was lying nearby and assaulted him.
While coming out of the house Shabhu thrust his knife on the
neck of Shah Alam felling him down. All of them then fled
away. Keramat Ali Khan arranged immediate hospitalisation of
all the injured including Shah Alam, whose condition was
precarious. Before, however, any treatment could be
administered Shah Alam died. While in the hospital Keramat
Ali Khan got a complaint written by Asmat Ali Khan (P.W.9)
as per his dictation and forwarded the same to the police
station.
At the hospital, Dr. S.P. Pandey (P.W.3) examined Sm.
Naeema Parveen (P.W.5), Irshad Khan, Babar Khan, Sm. Raees
Begum and Kaisher Khan (P.W.2) and found injuries on their
persons. P.W.5 had two incised wounds which, according to
P.W.3, could be caused by sharp edged weapon and the other
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four had sustained contusions, which could be caused by
blunt weapons. Chand Khan, who was also brought under arrest
to the hospital in that very night as he had injuries on his
person, was also examined by P.W.3. He found three incised
wounds on his person, all of which, according to him, could
be caused by a sharp edged weapon. Besides, P.W.3 examined
Faheem Khan for injuries which, he alleged, were sustained
by him in the incident that took place earlier in the
afternoon. According to P.W.3 the two stab injuries he found
on his person were likely to have been caused by a pointed
weapon.
The post-mortem examination on the body of Shah Alam
was held by Dr. O.N. Gupta on the following day (27.5.1977)
He found the following external injuries on his person:-
<SLS>
1. Incised punctured wound 5 cm. x 3 cm.
x chest cavity deep on the base of left
side neck, 5 cm. from the left sterno
clavicular joint with direction
downwards.
2. Abrasion 4 cm. x 1 cm. on the right
side forehead 3 cm. above right eye
brows.
3. Abrasion 3 cm. x 2 cm. on right side
forehead 3 cm. lateral to injury No. 1.
4. Abrasion 2 cm. x 1cm. on the left
side scapular region back.
5. Incised wound 2 cm. x 1 cm. x skin
deep on the left side back at inner
angle of left scapula.
6. Incised punctured wound 3 cm. x 1 cm.
chest cavity deep on left side back 4
cm. below injury No. 5.
<SLE>
On internal examination of the dead body he found that
the sixth rit was cut under injury No. 6; the pleura was cut
beneath the injuries No. 1 and 6, the left lung was cut
through and through upper lobe was cut both under injury
No.1 and 6 and the pericardium and the right side of the
heart were cut by the injury No.1. Dr. Gupta opined that the
death was due to shock and haemorrhage as a result of the
injuries to vital organs.
Shri V.P. Singh (P.W.16) Station House Officer of Ganj
Police Station took up investigation of the case registered
on the complaint of Keramat Ali Khan. Besides, interrogating
him and the injured persons in the hospital on that very
night, he inspected the place of occurrence, prepared a site
plan and seized some blood stained earth from near the gate
of the complainant’s house. After completion of
investigation he submitted charge-sheet against the nine
accused persons.
The appellants and the other accused persons pleaded
not guilty and asserted that they had been falsely
implicated. In his statement recorded under Section 313 Dr.
P.C.Chand Khan, however, admitted that earlier P.W.7 used to
work at his workshop but P.W.6 weaned him away. He also
admitted that he had gone to the workshop of Faheem Khan
with Shabbu and Ishtiad and asked him to hand over Aslam to
him and that he had assaulted him. He however denied to have
assaulted him with a knife. As regards the incident in
question, his version was that on that night there was a
festivity in the house of his cousin Sajjan and Mahboob
(since acquitted) to which he was an invitee. As Rafiouddin
of their mohalla was also invited in that function he went
to his house which was near the house of the complainant to
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accompany him. There, on hearing his voice, Shah Alam and
Kaisher Khan came out with knives accompanied by Babar Khan
and Irshad Khan and started beating him. When he cried aloud
Shabbu (appellant), Sharif and Salim who were standing
nearby and talking among themselves arrived there. When Shah
Alam and his companions attempted to assault Shabbu and
others, they in their defence assaulted them. As the ladies
of the house had come out then they also sustained minor
injuries. Appellant Shabbu, in his statement under Section
313 Dr.P.C. admitted the assault on Faheem Khan in that
afternoon but denied his presence at the time of the
incident in question.
To prove its case the prosecution examined sixteen
witnesses but no witness was examined on behalf of the
defence. On consideration of the evidence adduced the trial
Court held that the prosecution case was unworthy of credit.
On appeal the learned Judges of the High Court found the
evidence of the four eye-witnesses examined by the
prosecution, namely, P.Ws. 1, 2, 4 and 5 convincing and the
reasons given by the trial Court for disbelieving them and,
for that matter, discarding the case of the prosecution were
perverse.
It was urgeo on behalf of the appellants that as the
trial Court gave detailed reasons for disbelieving the
evidence of the prosecution witnesses the High Court was not
justified in interfering with the same even if another
reasonably possible view of the evidence in favour of the
prosecution might be taken. Having heard the learned counsel
at length and seen the judgments of the learned Courts below
in the light of the evidence on record, we find that the
High Court committed no error or injustice in interfering
with the order of acquittal for it has noticed all the
salient features of the case in the judgment of the trial
Court, discussed them well and disapproved them for cogent
and justified reasons. We are in complete agreement with the
High Court that the judgment of trial Court was perverse and
deserved to be set aside.
In the context of the respective cases of the parties,
it could not be - nor was it - disputed that an incident of
assault took place in the night of May 26, 1977 in or around
the residential premises of Keramat Ali Khan (P.W.1) in the
backdrop of an earlier incident in the afternoon in which
Faheem Khan (P.W.6) was injured. It was also not disputed
that in the incident in question Shah Alam met with his
death while some others including appellant Chand Khan
sustained injuries. In that view of the matter the principal
question that fell for determination before the learned
Courts below was whether it took place within the
residential premises of P.W.1 and in the manner as alleged
by the prosecution or in the lane outside his house as
claimed by the defence. To prove its version of the
incident, the prosecution relied, needless to say, upon the
evidence of the four eye-witnesses referred to earlier while
the defence relied upon the statement of the accused
including the appellant Chand Khan made under Section 313
Dr.P.C. and the circumstances appearing on record.
In negativing the prosecution version the trial Court
first held, for reasons given, that the assault on Faheem
Khan in the afternoon by Chand Khan could not be a motive
for committing the murder of Shah Alam and that no other
motive was ascribed by the prosecution. Even if we proceed
on the basis that the prosecution failed to prove the
genesis or motive and that the above finding of the trial
Court in this regard is unexceptionable still then this
appeal cannot succeed on that score for proof of motive is
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not essential for success of a prosecution case where - as
in the instant case - the ocular testimony in support of it
is convincing and reliable. Indeed, as our discussion to
follow will show the findings recorded by the trial Court
for discarding the evidence of the four eye witnesses are
based either on presumption, surmise and conjecture or on
undue and unjustified reliance upon minor and immaterial
contradictions.
In dealing with the evidence of the four eye -
witnesses the trial Court first observed that having regard
to the incident that took place in that afternoon. Faheem
Khan and Shah Alam could only be the targets of the attack
of the accused persons and not others, namely, Kaisher Khan,
Babar Khan and Irshad Khan as testified by them. It next
observed that if their evidence that Shah Alam and the above
three persons were sitting together in front of the
complainant’s house and were talking to each other when the
accused arrived there was to be believed, the latter could
have caught hold of Shah Alam from out of those persons and
put him to death in no time and then gone back. After making
the above observations the trial Court held:
<SLS>
"It may be that the members of the
complainant’s house might have come-out
at their door on hearing the noise and
alarm of this incident and that they
might be rebuking and even accusing
these accused-persons on their
assaulting Shah Alam etc".
<SLE>
The trial Court also disbelieved the prosecution case
as to the manner in which the accused persons entered into
the house of the complainant and beat the female members
and, in explaining away the injuries found on the persons of
Sm. Naeema Parveen and Sm. Raees Begum, observed:
<SLS>
"........and truth of the matter
appears to be that Sm. Naeema Parveen
and Sm. Raees Begum had accidently
sustained their injuries in this
incident when they had entered in the
arena of the fight for defending Shah
Alam etc. from the assault of the
accused."
<SLE>
The High Court brushed aside the first of the above
quoted findings of the trial Court with the following
comments:
<SLS>
"The observation of the Additional
Sessions Judge that the accused were
likely to single out Shah Alam and to
assault him alone in Shah Alam, Irshad
Khan, Babar Khan and Kaiser Khan had
been found sitting on the cot is
misconceived and devoid of sense for
Babar Khan the brother of Shah Alam and
Kaisher Khan and Irshad Khan who were
his close relatives could not have been
silent soectators. It is for this reason
that they had all sustained injuries
around the cot."
<SLE>
As regards the other finding the High Court observed
that in view of the nature of the injuries sustained by Sm.
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Naeema Parveen and Sm. Raees Begum and in the absence of any
suggestion put forward by the defence that those injuries
were caused accidentally the criticism of the trial Court
was perverse.
On a close analysis of the materials on record we are
of the opinion that the High Court was fully justified in
making the above comments. That Kaisher Khan (P.W.2), Babar
Khan and Irshad Khan were present at the material time as
testified by the four eye witnesses was admitted by the
defence. It was also admitted that besides Shah Alam the
above three persons as well as lady members of the house
sustained injuries. However, according to them, they had
beaten Shah Alam and other male members in exercise of their
right of private defence and the ladies sustained simple
injuries as they had then come out of the house. The trial
Court therefore was not at all justified in disbelieving
even the presence of Irshad Khan, Babar Khan and Kaisher
Khan at the spot. Then again, keeping in view the fact
that the injuries sustained by Sm. Naeema Parveen could be
caused by a sharp edged weapon only and it being not the
case of the defence that they had with them any such weapon
the finding of the trial Court that Sm. Naeema Parveen and
Sm. Raees Begum had accidentally sustained their injuries
must be said to be based on conjecture only.
Another reason which weighed with the trial Court in
disbelieving the prosecution case was that there were
discrepancies in evidence as to the details and manner of
assault. While detailing those discrepancies the trial Court
observed:
<SLS>
"According to the complainant
Keramat Ali Khan that cot was lying just
in front of the main door of his house
at a distance of only 2 to 3 steps from
the door and the entire beating outside
his house had taken place near that cot
and the last fatal blow of the chhuri
was also inflicted by Shabbu accused on
Shah Alam at only 2 or 3 steps in front
of his main door. On the other hand,
according to Sm. Naeema Parveen, that
cot was lying at 6 or 7 steps in front
of the main door of the house. According
to P.W. Kaisher Khan, to whom that cot
belonged, the cot was lying by the side
of his chapper, i.e., towards the north-
west of the complainant’s door and,
according to him it was lying at 6 or 7
steps from that door towards the left
side. According to P.W. Mardan Mian
alias Kallan Mian also, that cot was
lying at 7 or 8 steps towards the north-
west from the complainant’s door. P.W.
Keraman Ali Khan, at first, stated
before me that the accused-persons had
beaten Shah Alam etc, towards the east
of the cot. Then he stated in the next
breath that some of them were beating on
one side, while the others were beating
on the other side of the cot. Further on
he stated that the victims were roaming
around that cot, while being beaten, and
the samething has been stated by some
other witnesses."
<SLE>
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The discrepancies pointed out by the trial Court are
patently of minor character and cannot detract from the
evidentiary value of the eye-witnesses. The High Court was,
therefore, fully justified in ignoring those discrepancies
while dealing with the evidence of the four eye-witnesses.
The next reason canvassed by the trial Court for
disbelieving the prosecution case was that the evidence of
P.Ws. Kaisher Khan (P.W.2) and Mardan Mian (P.W.4) only
established that some of the accused persons had assaulted
Shah Alam and not all. Having recorded the above finding it
was imperative for the trial Court to consider the case of
the individual accused on their respective merits in the
light of other evidence on record and not to outright reject
the evidence of the two witnesses in its entirely for it is
trite that the principle Single in uno. Falsus in omnibus"
does not apply to criminal trials and it is the duty of the
Court to disengage the truth from falsenood.
The judgment of the trial Court is replete with similar
such findings which the High Court has rightly not accepted
as correct. However, to avoid prolixity we refrain from
detailing or discussing all of them and refer only to the
concluding one to highlight the absurd and perverse approach
of the trial Court in dispensing criminal justice. It
reads:-
<SLS>
"It is quite probable that Shah
Alam etc. miont be bearing grudge and
ill-will against Chand Khan etc. On
account of the noon incident of that
day, in which the accused Chand Khan,
Ishtiaq Khan and Shabbu had an
altercation with P.W. Raheem Khan and
had then beaten him; and it may be that
Shah Alam etc. might have caught-hold of
Chand Khan accused when he had gone to
the house of Rafiquddin for calling him
and that they might have taken him from
there in front of the complainant’s
house and might have assaulted him with
churis. Then, it is also quite probable
that the accused Sharif Khan, Salim Khan
and Shabbu might have arrived on the
spot on hearing the alarm raised by
Chand khan accused and that Shah Alam
etc. might have tried to assault them
also and thereupon they might have
assaulted Shah Alam etc. with dandas and
chhuri in defence of Chand Khan accused,
as also in their own selfdefence. It has
come in evidence that the house of
Shabbu accused is situated quite near to
the road crossing and that the house of
Salim Khan accused is also situated in
the same locality. So, it is quite
possible that the accused Shabbu, Salim
Khan and Chand Khan might be standing at
the road crossing near the house of
Shabbu accused and might be talking to
each-other at that time and that they
might have reached the sput on hearing
the alarm raised by Chand Khan accused."
(emphasis supplied)
<SLE>
By frequent recourse to and reliance upon the words
"might be" and "might have" in the above quoted passage the
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trial Court, instead of finding out which of the contending
versions was correct and acceptable, gave out a version of
its own relying solely on presumption, surmise and
conjecture. The trial Court would have been, on a proper
discussion and aporaisal of the evidence, fully justified to
hold that the prosecution case was unreliable and record an
order of acquittal in favour of accused without going into
the question as to whether the defence case was true, for
burden of proof was upon the prosecution. Equally justified
the trial Court would have been in recording such an order
if it found the defence case probable. But it was not at all
justified to make out a third case entering into the domain
of speculation. The High Court was, therefore, right in
basing its decision on a fresh and proper appraisal of the
evidence leaving aside the obstinate findings of the trial
Court. Having gone through the record we do not find any
reason to differ from the decision so arrived at by the High
Court.
Mr. Thakur, learned counsel for the appellants, however
submitted that even if it was held that the reasons which
weighed with the trial Court in recording the order of
acquittal were faulty and unsustainable still then the order
of acquittal was liable to be upheld for the evidence on
record did not Justify the impugned Judgment rendered by the
High Court. To bring home his contention Mr. Thakur urged
that the incident that took place in the afternoon in which
Faheem Khan was assaulted by Chand Khan might have been a
motive for the former to assault the latter and not vice-
versa. In that context, Mr. Thakur urged, the defence
version of the incident in question was more probable than
that of the prosecution. This contention of Mr. Thakur need
not be gone into for we have earlier observed, and at the
risk of repetition may again point out, that as the evidence
on record clearly proves that the incident took place in the
manner alleged by the prosecution absence or insufficency of
motive is immaterial. Mr. Thakur next submitted that the
evidence of the prosecution withesses so far as it related
to the assault on Sm. Naeema Praveen and Chand Khan inside
the house was patently false; firstly. because no blood was
found inside the house and secondly because no knife was
produced by Sm. Naeema Praveen much less seized by the
Investigation Officer. In support of this contention he drew
our attention to the evidence of the Investigation Officer
(PW 16) wherein he stated that neither he had seen nor shown
the vegetable cutting knife used by Sm. Naeema Praveen and
that he had found blood at the place which was about 8 steps
from the northern main door outside the house of Keramat Ali
and nowhere else. We are not impressed by any of the above
contentions.
There is no evidence on record to show that there was
profuse bleeding from the injuries sustained by the two
ladies and Chand Khan for blood to trickle down to the
floor. On the contrary, the find of blood near the threshold
of P.W.1’s house fits in with the evidence of the eye-
witnesses and the nature of injuries sustained by Shah Alam.
From the evidence of Sm. Naeema Praveen (PW 5) we get that
when the accused persons started beating the members of
their family inside their premises, she her mother and aunt
(Raees Begum) started shouting and cursing them. Then, when
they found Chand Khan was approaching them they went inside.
There Ishtiaq Khan gave two chhuri blows on the left side of
her face and Sharik Khan gave two danda blows to her aunt
Raees Begum. When she found Chand Khan was about to beat her
mother, she struck him with a vegetable cutting knife. The
above evidence of P.W.5 stands substantially corroborated by
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the other three eye-witnesses referred to earlier. Then
again the nature of injuries as found by the doctor upon
her, Sm. Raees Begum and Chand Khan fits in with her
testimony. In our opinion the best corroborative piece of
evidence is furnished by the F.I.R. which was lodged by
Keramat Ali (P.W.1) on the basis of what he heard from
P.W.5. In the F.I.R., which was lodged within two hours of
the incident, the substratum of the entire prosecution case
finds place including a statement that during the incident
Sm. Naeema Praveen had, in defending herself, given a blow
to one of the accused with a vegetable cutting knife. In
view of the above statement recorded in the F.I.R., the
Investigation Officer (P.W.16) ought to have taken steps to
seize the knife even if P.W. 5 had not produced it for, one
of the essential requisites of a proper investigation is
collection of evidence relating to the commission of the
offence and that necessarily includes, in a case of assault,
seizure of the weapon of offence, but then failure to
collect evidence and failure to produce evidence collected
during investigation at the trial carry two different
connotations and consequences. While, the former may entitle
the Court to hold the investigation to be perfunctory or
tainted affecting the entire trial in case of the latter the
Court may legitimately draw a presumption in accordance with
Section 114(g) of the Evidence Act. As the case presented
before us comes under the first category of failures we have
to find out whether we will be justified in discarding the
prosecution case solely for the remissness of the
Investigating Officer in seizing the knife. The consistent
and reliable evidence of the eye witnesses coupled with the
nature of injuries sustained by some of them and Chand Khan
and the fact that in the F.I.R. it has clearly been stated
that one of the miscreants had been assaulted by a vegetable
cutting knife do not persuade us to answer the question in
the affirmative. Mr. Thakur lastly submitted that the entire
prosecution story was improbable for if really the incident
had happened in the manner alleged by it, the persons
present in P.W.1’s house would have sustained more serious
injuries. We do not find any substance in this contention
for it is evident that Shah Alam was the main target and the
assault on others was carried out to thwart any resistance
from those present in the courtyard.
As all the points raised by Mr. Thakur fail and as on a
conspectus of the entire evidence we are fully satisfied
that the conclusions drawn by the High Court, particularly
regarding the roles played by the two appellants in the riot
and the murder of Shah Alam are unexceptionable, we dismiss
the appeal. The appellants, who are on bail, shall now
surrender to their bail bonds to serve out the sentences.