Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 82 of 2003
PETITIONER:
RIZAN & ANOTHER
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF CHHATISGARH THRU CHIEF SECRETARY GOVT. OF CHHATISGARH RAIPUR
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 21/01/2003
BENCH:
SHIVARAJ V. PATIL & ARIJIT PASAYAT
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
2003(1) SCR 457
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
ARIJIT PASAYAT, J. Leave granted.
Appellants call in question legality of impugned judgment rendered by the
Madhya Pradesh High Court at Jabalour, whereby it upheld the conviction and
sentence awarded by the Additional Sessions Judge, Jashpurnagar.
Prosecution version which led to the trial of the appellants (hereinafter
referred to as ’the accused’ by their respective names) is as follows:
On 29.11.86 information was lodged by Jhanguram (PW-2) that six persons had
assaulted him with intention to take his life, and had also caused injuries
to his wife Pandri Bai (P.W.4) and his daughter-in-law Tilobai (P.W.5). On
the basis of such information, the case was registered and investigation
was undertaken. On completion of investigation charge was framed for
commission of offences punishable under Sections 147, 148, 307 read with
Section 34 and Section 323 of the Indian Penal Code, 1860 (in short MPC’).
It was alleged that accused Khodhibai (since acquitted) and Pandri Bai
(P.W.4) are sisters. There was a bad blood between them over certain
properties and civil litigation was going on. The six accused persons were
cutting the crops raised by Jhanguram (P. W.2) on the date of the
occurrence. When he asked them not to do so, the accused persons did not
pay any heed. Suddenly accused-appellant Rizan snatched the axe which
Jhanguram (P.W.2) was holding and assaulted him with the said weapon and
caused several injuries on different parts of his body e.g. lips, hands and
feet. More particularly, accused-appellant. Duda hit Jhanguram and Pandri
Bai with a stick. Other accused persons also hit him with their hands and
feet. Some persons standing nearby came to their rescue. The injured P.Ws.
2, 4 and 5 were examined by the Doctor (PW-1). During investigation the
weapon of assault i.e. axe was seized from the accused-appellant, Rizan and
some other weapons from the other persons. Six witnesses were examined to
further the prosecution version. Accused persons pleaded innocence and
false implication. On consideration of the evidence on record, the Trial
Court held that the prosecution has not been able to bring home the
accusations against accused-Paras, Vinod, Khodibai and Jaymala.
Accused-appellant Rizan was found guilty for the offences punishable under
Section 326 IPC for inflicting injuries on Jhanguram (P.W.2) and under
Section 323 IPC for the injuries inflicted on Pandri Bai (P.W.4). Accused
Duda was found guilty for the offences punishable under Section 323 IPC for
inflicting injuries on aforesaid two witnesses. However, both the accused-
appellants Rizan and Duda were acquitted of the offences relatable to
Sections 147 and 148 IPC. It was also held that the offence committed by
the accused persons is not covered by Section 307 IPC. After hearing the
accused persons on the question of sentence, accused-appellant, Rizan was
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sentenced to undergo RI for two years and two months respectively for the
offence punishable under Sections 326 and 323 IPC. Both the sentences were
directed to run concurrently. Accused Duda was sentenced to undergo RI for
two months. In appeal, by the impugned judgment, the High Court dismissed
the appeal maintaining the convictions and the sentences. In support of the
appeal, learned counsel for the accused-appellants submitted that this is a
case where the conviction is not maintainable as the injuries were
inflicted by the accused-appellants while exercising their right of private
defence. Further on the same set of evidence four persons have been
acquitted and, therefore, so far as the appellants are concerned,
conviction does not stand to reason. It is also submitted that the
witnesses who claim to have seen the occurrence are witnesses who were in
inimical terms with the accused-appellants. Residually, it is submitted
that the sentences as imposed are high, and considering the fact that the
occurrence took place five years back, the sentences should be reduced to
what has already been undergone which is stated to be about three months.
It is pointed out that accused-appellant. Duda has already suffered the
sentence awarded. Learned Counsel for the prosecution on the other hand
submitted that the evidence clearly rules out application of the right of
private defence. Merely because the evidence of some of the witnesses has
not been accepted to be fully reliable, in view of the clear and
categorical findings recorded that the evidence is cogent and credible so
far as the appellants are concerned, the conviction does not suffer from
any infirmity.
We shall first deal with the contention regarding interestedness of the
witnesses for furthering prosecution version. Relationship is not a factor
to affect credibility of a witness. It is more often than not that a
relation would not conceal actual culprit and make allegations against an
innocent person. Foundation has to be laid if plea of false implication is
made. In such cases, the court has to adopt a careful approach and analyse
evidence to find out whether it is cogent and credible.
In Dalip Singh and Ors. v. The State of Punjab, AIR (1953) SC 364 it has
been laid down as under:-
"A witness is normally to be considered independent unless he or she
springs from sources which are likely to be tainted and that usually means
unless the witness has cause, such as enmity against the accused, to wish
to implicate him falsely. Ordinarily a close relation would be the last to
screen the real culorit and falsely implicate an innocent person. It is
true, when feelings run high and there is personal cause for enmity, there
is a tendency to drag in an innocent person against whom a witness has a
grudge along with the guilty, but foundation must be laid for such a
criticism and the mere fact of relationship far from being a foundation is
often a sure guarantee of truth. However, we are not attempting any
sweeping generalization. Each case must be judged on its own facts. Our
observations are only mads to combat what is so often put forward in cases
before us as a general rule of prudence. There is no such general rule.
Each case must be limited to and be governed by its own facts.
The above decision has since been followed in Guli Chand and Ors. v. State
of Rajasthan, [1974] 3 SCC 698 in which Vadivelu Thevar v. State of Madras,
AIR (1957) SC 614 was also relied upon.
We may also observe that the ground that the witness being a close relative
and consequently being a partisan witness, should not be relied upon has no
substance. This theory was repelled by this Court as early as in Dalip
Singh’s case supra in which surprise was expressed over the impression
which prevailed in the minds of the Members of the Bar that relatives were
not independent witnesses. Speaking through Vivian Bose. J. it was
observed:
"We are unable to agree with the learned Judges of the High Court that the
testimony of the two eyewitnesses requires corroboration. If the foundation
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for such an observation is based on the fact that the witnesses are women
and that the fate of even men hangs on their testimony, we know of such
rule. If it is grounded on the reason that they are closely related to the
deceased we are unable to concur. This is a fallacy common to may criminal
cases and one which another Bench of this Court endeavoured to dispel in
Rameshwar v. State of Rajasthan, AIR (1957) SC 54 at p.59). We find,
however, that the unfortunately still persists, if not in the judgments of
the Courts, at any rate in the arguments of counsel."
Again in Masalti and Ors. v. State of U.P.. AIR (1965) SC 202 this Court
observed; 202-210 para 14;
"But it would, we think, be unreasonable to contend that evidence given by
witnesses should be discarded only on the ground that it is evidence of
partisan or interested witnesses.......The mechanical rejection of such
evidence on the sole ground that it is partisan would invariably lead to
failure of justice. No hard and fast rule can be laid down as to how much
evidence should be appreciated. Judicial approach has to be cautions in
dealing with such evidence: put the plea that such evidence should be
rejected because it is partisan cannot be accepted as correct."
To the same effect is the decision in State of Punjab v. Jagir Singh, AIR
(1973) SC 2407 and Lebna v. State of Haryana, [2002] 3 SCC 76.
Stress was laid by the accused-appellants on the non-acceptance of evidence
tendered by some witnesses to contend about desirability to throw out
entire prosecution case. In essence prayer is to apply the principle of
"falsus in uno falsus in omnibus" (false in one thing, false in
everything). This plea is clearly untenable. Even if major portion of
evidence is found to be deficient, in case residue is sufficient to prove
guilt of an accused, notwithstanding acquittal of number of other co-
accused persons, his conviction can be maintained. It is the duty of Court
to separate grain from chaff. Where chaff can be separated from grain, it
would be open to the Court to convict an accused notwithstanding the fact
that evidence has been found to be deficient to prove guilt of other
accused persons. Falsity of particular material witness or material would
not ruin it from the beginning to end. The maxim "falsus in uno falsus in
ominbus" has no application in India and the witnesses cannot be branded as
liar. The maxim "falsus in uno falsus in omnibus" has not received general
acceptance nor has this maxim come to occupy the status of rule of law. It
is merely a rule of caution. All that it amounts to, is that in such case
testimony may be disregarded, and not that it must be disregarded. The
doctrine merely involves the question of weight of evidence which a Court
may apply in a given set of circumstances, but it is not what may be called
’a mandatory rule of evidence’. See Nisar Alli v. The State of Uttar
Pradesh, AIR (1957) SC 366. Merely because some of the accused persons have
been acquitted, though evidence against all of them, so far as direct
testimony went, was the same does not lead as a necessary corollary that
those who have been convicted must also be acquitted. It is always open to
a Court to differentiate accused who had been acquitted from those who were
convicted. See Gurucharan Singh and Am. v. State of Punjab, AIR (1956) SC
460. The doctrine is a dangerous one specially in India for if a whole body
of the testimony were to be rejected, because witness was evidently
speaking an untruth in some aspect, it is to be feared that administration
of criminal justice would come to a dead-stop. Witnesses just cannot help
in giving embroidery to a story, however, true in the main. Therefore, it
has to be appraised in each case as to what extent the evidence is worthy
of acceptance, and merely because in some respects the Court considers the
same to be insufficient for placing reliance on the testimony of a witness,
it does not necessarily follow as a matter of law that it must be
disregarded in all respects as well. The evidence has to be shifted with
care. The aforesaid dictum is not a sound rule for the reason that one
hardly comes across a witness whose evidence does not contain a grain of
untruth or at any rate exaggeration, embroideries or embellishment. See
Sohrab s/o Belt Navata and Anr. v. The State of Madhya Pradesh, [1972] 3
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SCC 751 and Ugar Ahir and Ors. v. The State of Bihar, AIR (1965) SC 277. An
attempt has to be made to, as noted above, in terms of felicitous metaphor,
separate grain from the chaff, truth from falsehood. Where it is not
feasible to separate truth from falsehood, because grain and chaff are
inextricably mixed up, and in the process of separation an absolutely new
case has to be reconstructed by divorcing essential details presented by
the prosecution completely from the context and the background against
which they are made, the only available course to be made is to discard the
evidence in toto. See Zwingle Ariel v. State of Madhya Pradesh, AIR (1954)
SC 15 and Balaka Singh and Ors. v. The State of Punjab AIR (1962). As
observed by this Court in State of Rajasthan v. Smt. Kalki and Anr., AIR
(1981) SC 1390, normal discrepancies in evidence are those which are due to
normal errors of observation, normal errors of memory due to lapse of time,
due to mental disposition such as shock and horror at the time of
occurrence and those are always there however honest and truthful a witness
may be Material discrepancies are those which are not normal, and not
expected of a normal person. Courts have to label the category to which a
discrepancy may be categorized. While normal discrepancies do not corrode
the credibility of a party’s case, material discrepancies do so. These
aspects were highlighted recently in Krishna Mochi and Ors. v. State of
Bihar, etc. JT (2002) 4 SC 186 Gangadhar Behera and Ors. v. State of
Orissa, (2002) 7 Supreme 276. Accusations have been clearly established
against accused-appellants in the case at hand. The Courts below have
categorically indicated the distinguishing features in evidence so far as
acquitted and convicted accused are concerned.
Then comes plea relating to alleged exercise of right of private defence.
Section 96 IPC provides that nothing is an offence which is done on the
exercise of the right of private defence. The Section does not define the
expression ’right of private defence.’ It merely indicates that nothing is
an offence which is done in the exercise of such right. Whether in a
particular set of circumstance, a person acted in the exercise of the right
of private defence is a question of fact to be determined on the facts and
circumstances of each case. No test in the abstract for determining such a
question can be laid down. In determining this question of fact, the Court
must consider all the surrounding circumstances. It is not necessary for
the accused to plead in so many words that he acted in self-defence. If the
circumstances show that the right of private defines was legitimately
exercised it is open to the Court to consider such a plea. In a given case
the Court can consider it even if the accused has not taken it, if the same
is available to be considered from the material on record. Under Section
105 of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872 the burden of proof is on the accused
who sets up the plea of self-defence and, in the absence of proof, it is
not possible for the Court to presume the truth of the plea of self-
defence. The Court shall presume the absence of such circumstances. It is
for the accused to place necessary material on record either by himself
adducing positive evidence or by eliciting necessary facts from the
witnesses examined for the prosecution. An accused taking the plea of the
right of private defence is not required to call evidence: he can establish
his plea by reference to circumstances transpiring from the prosecution
evidence itself. The question in such a case would be a question of
assessing the true effect of the prosecution evidence, and not a question
of the accused discharging any burden. Where the right of private defence
is pleaded, the defence must be a reasonable and probable version
satisfying the Court that the harm caused by the accused was necessary for
either warning off the attack or for forestalling the further reasonable
apprehension from the side of the accused. The burden of establishing the
plea of self-defence is on the accused and the burden stands discharged by
showing preponderance of probabilities in favour of that plea on the basis
of the material on record. See Munshi Ram and Ors. v. Delhi Administration,
AIR (1968) SC 702; State of Gujarat v. Bal Fatima, AIR (1975) SC 1478;
State of U.P. v. Mohd. Musheer Khan, AIR (1977) SC 2226 and Mohinder Pal
Jolly v. State of Punjab, AIR (1979) SC 577). Sections 100 to 10! define
the extent of the right of private defence of body. If a person has a right
of private defence of body under Section 97, that right extends under
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Section 100 to causing death if there is reasonable apprehension that death
of grievous hurt would be the consequence of the assault. The oft quoted
observation of this Court in Salim Zia v. State of U.P., AIR (1979) SC 391,
runs as follows:
"It is true that the burden on an accused person to establish the plea of
self-defence is not as onerous as the one which lies on the prosecution and
that, while the prosecution is required to prove its case beyond reasonable
doubt, the accused need not establish the plea to the hilt and may
discharge his onus by establishing a mere preponderance of probabilities
either by laying basis for that plea in the cross-examination of the
prosecution witnesses or by adducing defence evidence."
The accused need not prove the existence of the right of private defence
beyond reasonable doubt. It is enough for him to show as in a civil case
that the preponderance of probabilities is in favour of his plea.
The number of injuries is not always a safe criterion for determining who
the aggressor was, it cannot be stated as a universal rule that whenever
the injuries are on the body of the accused person, a presumption must
necessarily be raised that the accused persons had caused injuries in
exercise of the right of private defence. The defence has to further
establish that the injuries so caused on the accused probabilises the
version of the right of private defence. Non-explanation of the injuries
sustained by the accused at about the time of occurrence or in the course
of altercation is a very important circumstance. But mere non-explanation
of the injuries by the prosecution may not affect the prosecution case in
all cases. This principle applies to cases where the injuries sustained by
the accused are minor and superficial or where the evidence is so clear and
cogent so independent and disinterested, so probable, consistent and
credit-worthy, that if far outweighs the effect of the omission on the part
of the prosecution to explain the injuries. See Lakshmi Singh v. State of
Bihar, AIR (1976) SC 2263. In this case, as the Courts below found there
was not even a single injury on the accused persons, while PW2 sustained
large number of injuries and was hospitalized for more than a month. A plea
of right of private defence cannot be based on surmises and speculation.
While considering whether the right of private defence is available to an
accused, it is not relevant whether he may have a chance to inflict severe
and mortal injury on the aggressor. In order to find whether the right or
private defence is available to an accused, the entire incident must be
examined with care and viewed in its proper setting. Section 97 deals with
the subject matter of right of private defence. The plea of right comprises
the body or property (i) of the person exercising the right; or (ii) of any
other person; and the right may be exercised in the case of any offence
against the body, and in the case of offences of theft, robbery, mischief
or criminal trespass, and attempts at such offences in relation to
property. Section 99 lays down limits of the right of private defence.
Sections 96 and 98 give a right of private defence against certain offences
and acts. The right given under Sections 96 to 98 and 100 to 106 is
controlled by Section 99. To claim a right of private defence extending to
voluntary causing of death, the accused must show that there were
circumstances giving rise to reasonable grounds for apprehending that
either death or grievous hurt would be caused to him. The burden is on the
accused to show he had a right of private defence which extended to causing
of death. Sections 100 and 101. IPC define the limit and extent of right of
private defence. Sections 102 and 105. IPC deal with commencement and
continuance of the right of private defence of body and property
respectively. The right commence, as soon as a reasonable apprehension of
danger to the body arises from an attempt, or commit the offence, although
the offence may not have been committed but not until that there is that
reasonable apprehension. The right lasts so long as the reasonable
apprehension of the danger to the body continues. In Jai Dev v. State of
Punjab, AIR (1963) SC 612, it was observed that as soon as the cause for
reasonable apprehension disappears and the threat has either been destroyed
or has been put to route, there can be no occasion to exercise the right of
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private defence.
In order to find whether right of private defence is available or not, the
injuries received by the accused, the imminence of threat to his safety,
the injuries caused by the accused and the circumstance whether the accused
had time to have recourse to public authorities are all relevant factors to
be considered. Thus, running to house, fetching a tabli and assaulting the
deceased are by no means a matter of course. These acts bear stamp of a
design to kill and take the case out of the purview of private defence.
Similar view was expressed by this Court in Biran Singh v. State of Bihar,
AIR (1975) SC 87 and recently in Sekar @ Raja Bekharan v. State represented
by Inspector of Police Tamil Nadu, (2002) 7 Supreme 124.
Sentences imposed do not in any way appear to be harsh. Merely because the
occurrence took place sometime back, same cannot be a factor to reduce the
sentences. The appeal is without merit and is dismissed.