Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
NANAK CHAND
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF PUNJAB.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
25/01/1955
BENCH:
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
BENCH:
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
CITATION:
1955 AIR 274 1955 SCR (1)1201
ACT:
Indian Penal Code (Act XLV of 1860), s. 34-Merely explana-
tory-No offence created there by-Ss. 34 and 149 of the
Indian Penal Code-Distinction between the two-Code of
Criminal Procedure (Act V of 1898), s. 233-Charge under s.
302 read with s. 149, Indian Penal Code-No specific charge
under s. 302, Indian Penal Code as required by s. 233 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure-Conviction under s. 302-Legality
thereof.
HEADNOTE:
Section 34 of the Indian Penal Code is merely explanatory.
It does not create any specific offence. Under this section
several persons must be actuated by a common intention and
when in further-
(1) A.I.R. 1936 Lah. 68.
1202
ance of that common intention a criminal act is done by
them, each of them is liable for that act as if the act had
been done by him alone.
There is a clear distinction between the provisions of s. 34
and s. 149 of the Indian Penal Code and the two sections
are not to be confused. The principal element in s. 34 of
the Indian Penal Code is the common intention to commit a
crime. In furtherance of the common intention several acts
may be done by several persons resulting in the commission
of that crime. In such a situation s. 34 provides that each
one of them would be liable for that crime in the same
manner as if all the acts resulting in that crime had been
done by him alone. There is no question of common intention
in s. 149 of the Indian Penal Code. An offence may be
committed by a member of an unlawful assembly and the other
members will be liable for that offence although there was
no common intention between that person and the other
members of the unlawful assembly to commit that offence
provided the conditions laid down in the section are
fulfilled. Thus if the offence committed by that person is
in prosecution of the common object of the unlawful assembly
or such as the members of that assembly knew to be likely to
be committed in prosecution of the common object, every
member of the unlawful assembly would be guilty of that
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offence, although there may have been no common intention
and no participation by the other members in the actual
commission of that offence.
There is a difference between object and intention, for
although the object may be common, the intentions of the
several members of the unlawful assembly may differ and
indeed may be similar only in one respect namely that they
are all -unlawful, while the element of participation in
action, which is the leading feature of s. 34, is replaced
in s. 149 by membership of the assembly at the time of the
committing of the offence.
A charge for a substantive offence under section 302, or
section 325 of the Indian Penal Code, etc. is for a distinct
and separate offence from that under section 302, read with
section 149 or section 325, read with section 149, etc.
A person charged with an offence read with s. 149 cannot be
convicted of the substantive offence without a specific
charge being framed as required by s. 233 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure.
There was no room for the application of s. 236 of the Code
of Criminal Procedure to the facts of the present case.
The provisions of s. 236 of the Code of Criminal Procedure
can apply only in cases where there is no doubt about the
facts which can be proved but a doubt arises as to which of
several offences have been committed on the proved facts in
which case any number of charges can be framed and tried or
alternative charges can be framed. In the present case
there was no doubt about the facts and if the allegation
against the appellant that he had caused the injuries to the
deceeased with takwa was established by evidence, then there
could be no doubt that the offence of murder had been
committed,
1203
In the present case there was no question of any error,
omission or irregularity, in the charge within the meaning
of s. 537 of the Code of Criminal Procedure because no
charge under s. 302 of the Indian Penal Code was in fact
framed.
There was an illegality in the present case and not an
irregularity which was curable by the provisions of ss. 535
and 537 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. Assuming however
that there was merely an irregularity which was curable, the
irregularity in the circumstances of the case was not
curable because the appellant was misled in his defence by
the absence of a charge under s. 302 of the Indian Penal
Code.
By framing a charge under s. 302, read with s. 149, Indian
Penal Code against the appellant, the Court indicated that
it was not charging the appellant with the offence of murder
and to convict him for murder and sentence him under s. 302
of the Indian Penal Code was to convict him of an offence
with which he had not been charged. In defending himself
the appellant was not called upon to meet such a charge and
in his defence he may well have considered it unnecessary to
concentrate on that part of the prosecution ease.
Barendra Kumar Ghosh v. Emperor ( (1925] I.L.R. 52 Cal.
197), Queen v. Sabid Ali and others ( [1873] 20 W.R. (Cr.)
5), Panchu Das v. Emperor ( [1907] I.L.R. 34 Cal. 698),
Beazuddi and Others v. King-Emperor ([1901] 6 C.W.N. 98),
Emperor v. Madan Mandal and Others ( [1914] I.L.R. 41 Cal.
662), Theethumalai Gounder and Others v. King-Emperor
([1924] I.L.R. 47 Mad. 746), Queen-Empress v. Bisheshar and
Others ( [1887] I.L.R. 9 All. 645), Taikkottathil Kunheen (
[1923] 18 L.W. 946), Bamasray Ahir v. King-Emperor ( [1926]
I.L.R. 7 Patna 484), Sheo Ram and Others v. Emperor (A.I.R.
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1948 All. 162), and Karnail Singh and another v. State of
Punjab ( [1954] S.C.R. 904), referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 132 of
1954.
Appeal by Special Leave granted by the Supreme Court by its
Order dated the 3rd September, 1954 from the Judgment and
Order dated the 15th June’ 1954 of the High Court of
Judicature for the State of Punjab at Simla in Criminal in
Appeal No. 287 of 1954 arising out of the Judgment and Order
dated the 14th April 1954 of the Court of Additional
Sessions Judge in Session Case No. 4 of 1954.
J.G. Sethi, (Naunit Lal, with him), for the appellant.
1204
Gopal Singh and P. G. Gokhale, for the respondent.
1955. January 25. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
IMAM J.-This appeal by Nanak Chand comes by special leave
against the judgment of the Punjab (1) High Court. The
appellant was convicted by the High Court under section 302
of the Indian Penal Code and the sentence of death passed on
him by the Additional Sessions Judge of Jullundur was con-
firmed.
On the facts alleged by the prosecution there can be no
doubt that Sadhu Ram was killed on the 5th of November,
1953, at about 6-45 P.m. at the shop of Vas Dev P. W. 2. It
is alleged that the appellant along with others assaulted
Sadhu Ram. The appellant was armed with a takwa. Numerous
injuries were found on the person of Sadhu Ram. According
to the doctor, who held the postmortem examination, injuries
1, 3 and 4 were due to a heavy sharp edged weapon and could
be caused by a takwa. It was denied by the prosecution that
the deceased was assaulted by any other person with a takwa.
According to the Medical evidence, injuries 1, 3 and 4
individually, as well as collectively, were enough to cause:
death in the ordinary course of nature.
In the Court of Sessions the appellant along with others was
charged under section 148 and section 302, read with section
149 of the Indian Penal Code. The Additional Sessions
Judge, however, held, that the charge of rioting was not
proved. He, accordingly found the appellant and three
others guilty under section 302 read with section 34 of the
Indian Penal Code. He acquitted the other three accussed
There was an appeal by three convicted persons to the High
Court and the high court convicted the appellant alone
under section 302 of the Indian Penal Code, confirming the
sentence of death but altered the conviction of the other
accused ’from section 302/34 to section 323, Indian Penal
Code. it held that the provisions of section 34 of the
Indian Penal Code did not apply.
1205
On behalf of the appellant questions of law and questions of
fact were urged. It will be unnecessary to deal with the
questions of fact if the argument on points of law is
accepted.
The principal question of law to be considered is as to
whether the appellant could legally be convicted for murder
and sentenced under section 302, Indian Penal Code when he
was not charged with that offence. It was urged that as the
appellant had been acquitted of the charge of rioting and
the offence under section 302/149 of the Indian Penal Code,
he could not be convicted for the substantive offence of
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murder under section 302, Indian Penal Code, without a
charge having been framed against him under that section.
Reliance has been placed on the provisions of the Code of
Criminal Procedure relating to the framing of charges, the
observations of the Privy Council in Barendra Kumar Ghosh v.
Emperor(1) and certain decisions of the Calcutta High Court
to which reference will be made later on. It was urged that
for every distinct offence of which a person is accused,
there shall be a separate charge and every such charge shall
be tried separately except in cases mentioned under sections
234, 235, 236) 237 and 239 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure. Section 149 of the Indian Penal Code creates a
specific offence and it is a separate offence from the
offence of murder punishable under section 302 of the Indian
Penal Code. The provisions of sections 236, 237 and 238 of
the Code of Criminal Procedure did not apply to the facts
and circumstances of the present case. Off behalf of the
Prosecution, however, it was urged that section 149 did not
create any offence at all and therefore no separate charge
was obligatory under section 233 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure and that in any event the provisions of sections
236 and 237 of the Code of Criminal Procedure did apply and
the appellant could have been convicted and sentenced, under
section 302 of the Indian Penal Code, although no charge for
the substantive offence of murder had been framed against
him.
(1) [1925] I.L.R. 52 Cal, 197,
1206
It is necessary, therefore, to examine the provisions of
section 149 of the Indian Penal Code and consider as to
whether this section creates a specific offence. Section
149 of the Indian Penal Code is to be found in Chapter VIII
of that Code which deals with offences against the public
tranquillity. Section 149 of the Indian Penal Code reads:-
"If an offence is committed by any member of an unlawful
assembly in prosecution of the common object of that
assembly, or such as the members of that assembly knew to be
likely to be committed in prosecution of that object, every
person who, at the time of the committing of that offence,
is a member of the same assembly, is guilty of that
offence".
This section postulates that an offence is committed by a
member of an unlawful assembly in prosecution of the common
object of that assembly or such as a member of the assembly
knew to be likely to be committed in prosecution of that
object and declares that in such circumstances every person,
who was a member of the same assembly at the time of the
commission of the offence, was guilty of that offence.
Under this section a person, who is a member of an unlawful
assembly is made guilty of the offence committed by another
member of the same assembly, in the circumstances mentioned
in the section, although he had no intention to commit that
offence and had done no overt act except his presence in the
assembly and sharing the common object of that assembly.
Without the provisions of this section a member of an
unlawful assembly could not have been made liable for the
offence committed not by him but by another member of that
assembly. Therefore when the accused are acquitted of riot
and the charge for being members of an unlawful assembly
fails, there can be no conviction of any one of them for an
offence which he had not himself committed. Similarly under
section 150 of the Indian Penal Code, a specific offence is
created. Under this section a person need not be a member
of an unlawful assembly and yet he would be guilty of being
a member of an unlawful assembly and guilty of an offence
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which may be committed by
1207
a member of the unlawful assembly in the circumstances
mentioned in the section. Sections 149 and 150 of the
Indian Penal Code are not the only sections in that Code
which create a specific offence. Section 471 of the Indian
Penal Code makes it an offence to fraudulently or
dishonestly use as genuine any document which a person knows
or has reason to believe to be a forged document and it
provides that such a person shall be punished in the same
manner as if he had forged such document. Abetment is an
offence under the Indian Penal Code and is a separate crime
to the principal offence. The sentence to be inflicted may
be the same as for the principal offence. In Chapter XI of
the Indian Penal Code offences of false evidence and against
public justice are mentioned. Section 193 prescribes the
punishment for giving false evidence in any stage of a
judicial proceeding or fabricating false evidence for the
purpose of being used in any stage of a judicial proceeding.
Section 195 creates an offence and the person convicted of
this offence is liable in certain circumstances to be
punished in the same manner as a person convicted of the
principal offence. Sections 196 and 197 to 200 of the
Indian Penal Code also create offences and a person
convicted under any one of them would be liable to be
punished in the same manner as if he had given false
evidence.
It was, however, urged on behalf of the Prosecution that
section 149 merely provides for constructive guilt similar
to section 34 of the Indian Penal Code. Section 34 reads:
"When a criminal act is done by several persons, in
furtherance of the common intention of all, each of such
persons is liable for that act in the same manner as if it
were done by him alone".
This section is merely explanatory. Several persons must be
actuated by a common intention and when in furtherance of
that common intention a criminal act is done by them, each
of them is liable for that act as if the act bad been done
by him alone. This section does not create any specific
offence. As was pointed out by Lord Sumner in Barendra
Kumar Ghosh v. Emperor(1) "’a criminal act’ means that
(1) [1925] I.L.R. 52 Cal. 197,
1208
unity of criminal behaviour which results in something, for
which an individual would be punishable, if it were all done
by himself alone, that is, in a criminal offence". There is
a clear distinction between the provisions of sections 34
and 149 of the Indian Penal Code and the two sections are
not to be confused. The principal element in section 34 of
the Indian Penal Code is the common intention to commit a
crime. In furtherance of the common intention several acts
may be done by several persons resulting in the commission
of that crime. In such a situation section 34 provides that
each one of them would be liable for that crime in the same
manner as if all the acts resulting in that crime had been
done by him alone.’ There is no question of common intention
in section 149 of the Indian Penal Code. An offence may be
committed by a member of an unlawful assembly and the other
members will be liable for that offence although there was
no common intention between that person and other members of
the unlawful assembly to commit that offence provided the
conditions laid down in the section are fulfilled. Thus if
the offence committed by that person is in prosecution of
the common object of the unlawful assembly or such as the
members of that assembly knew to be likely to be committed
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in prosecution of the common object, every member of the
unlawful assembly would be guilty of that offence, although
there may have been no common intention and no participation
by the other members in the actual commission of that
offence. In Barendra Kumar Ghosh v. Emperor(1) Lord Sumner
dealt with the argument that if section 34 of the Indian
Penal Code bore the meaning adopted by the Calcutta High
Court, then sections 114 and 149 of that Code would be
otiose. In the opinion of Lord Sumner, however, section 149
is certainly not otiose,, for in any case it created a
specific offence. It postulated an assembly of five or more
persons having a common object, as named in section 141 of
the Indian Penal Code and then the commission of an offence
by one member of it in prosecution of that object and he
referred to Queen v. Sabid Ali and
(1) [1925] I.L.R. 52 Cal, 197,
1209
Others(1). He pointed out that there was a difference
between object and intention, for although the object may be
common, the intentions of the several members of the
unlawful assembly may differ and indeed may be similar only
in respect that they are all unlawful, while the element of
participation in action, which is the leading feature of
section 34, was replaced in section 149 by membership of the
assembly at the time of the committing of the offence. It
was argued, however, that these observations of Lord Sumner
were obiter dicta. Assuming though not conceding that may
be so, the observations of a Judge of such eminence must
carry weight particularly if the observations are in keeping
with the provisions of the Indian Penal Code. It is,
however, to be remembered that the observations of Lord
Sumner did directly arise on the argument made before the
Privy Council, the Privy Council reviewing as a whole the
provisions of sections 34, 114 and 149 of the Indian Penal
Code.
On behalf of the appellant certain decisions of the
Calcutta High Court were relied upon in support of the
submission made, viz. Panchu Das v. Emperor(2), Reazuddi
and Others v. King-Emperor(3) and Emperor v. Madan Mandal
and Others(’ ). These decisions support the contention that
it will be illegal to convict an accused of the substantive
offence under a section without a charge being framed if he
was acquitted of the offence under that section read with
section 149 of the Indian Penal Code., On the other hand,
the prosecution relied upon a decision of the. Full Bench
of the Madras High Court in Theetkumalai Gounder and Others
v. King-Emperor(5) and the case Queen Empress v. Bisheshar
and Others(6). The decision of the Madras High Court was
given in April, 1924, and reliance was placed upon the
decision of the Allahabad High Court. The decision of -the
Privy Council in Barendra Kumar Ghosh’s case was in October,
1924. The Madras High Court, therefore, did not have before
it the decision of the - Privy Council. It is impossible
to, say what view might have been expressed
(1) [1873] 20 W.R. (Cr.) 5.(2) [1907] I.L.R. 34 Cal.
698.
(3) [1961] 6 O.W.N 98.(4) [1914] I.L.R. 41,Cal. 662.
(5) [1924] I.L.R. 47 Mad. 746.(6) [1887] T.L.R. 9 All.
645.
1210
by that court if the Privy Council’s judgment in the
aforesaid case had been available to the court. The view of
the Calcutta High Court had been noticed and it appears that
a decision of the Madras High Court in Taikkottathil
Kunheen(1) was to the effect that section 149 of the Indian
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Penal Code is a distinct offence from section 325 of the
Indian Penal Code. Because of this it was thought advisable
to refer the matter. to a Full Bench. Two questions were
referred to the Full Bench: (1) When a charge omits section
149, Indian Penal Code, and the conviction is based on the
provisions of that section, is that conviction necessarily
bad, or does it depend on whether the accused has or has not
been materially rejudiced by the omission? (2) When a charge
has been framed under sections 326 and 149, Indian Penal
Code, is a conviction under section 326, Indian Penal Code,
necessarily bad, or does this also depend on whether the
accused has or has not been materially prejudiced by the
form of the charge? -The Full Bench agreed with the view
expressed by Sir John Edge in the Allahabad case that
section 149 created no offence, but was, like section 34,
merely declaratory of a principle of the common law, and its
object was to make it clear that an accused who comes within
that section cannot put forward as a defence that it was not
his hand which inflicted the grievous hurt. It was observed
by Spencer, J. that a person could not be tried and
sentenced under section 149 alone, as no punishment is
provided by the section. Therefore the omission of section
149 from a charge does not create an illegality by reason of
section 233 of the Code of Criminal Procedure which provides
that for every distinct offence of which any person is
accused there shall be a separate charge. They did not
agree, with the general statement in Reazuddi’s case(2) that
it is, settled law that when a person is charged by
implication under section 149, he cannot be convicted of the
substantive offence.
A charge for a substantive offence under section 302, or
section 325 of the Indian Penal Code, etc. is for a distinct
and separate offence from that under section
(1) [1928] 18 L.W. 946.
(2) (1901] 6 W.N. 98.
1211
302, read with section 149 or section 325, read with section
149, etc. and to that extent the Madras view is incorrect.
It was urged by reference to section 40 of the Indian Penal
Code that section 149 cannot be regarded as creating an
’offence’ because it does not itself provide for a
punishment. Section 149 creates an offence but the
punishment must depend on the offence of which the offender
is by that section made guilty. Therefore the appropriate
punishment section must be read with it. It was neither
desirable nor possible to prescribe one uniform punishment
for all cases which may fall within it. The finding that
all the members of an unlawful assembly are guilty of the
offence committed by one of them in the prosecution of the
common object at once subjects all the members to the
punishment prescribed for that offence and the relative
sentence. Reliance was also placed upon the decision of the
Patna High Court in Ramasray Ahir v. King-Emperor(1) as well
as the decision of the Allahabad High Court in Sheo Ram and
Others v. Emperor(1). In the former case the decision of
the Privy Council in Barendra Kumar Ghosh’s case was not
considered and the decision followed the Full Bench of the
Madras High Court and the opinion of Sir John Edge. In the
latter case the Allahabad High Court definitely declined to
answer the question as to whether the accused charged with
an offence read with section 149, Indian Penal Code, or with
an offence read with section 34, Indian Penal Code, could be
convicted of the substantive offence only.
After an examination of the cases referred to on behalf of
the appellant and the prosecution we are of the opinion that
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the view taken by the Calcutta High Court is the correct
view namely, that a person charged with an offence read with
section 149 cannot be convicted of the substantive offence
without a specific charge being framed ’as required by
section 233 of the Code of Criminal Procedure.
It was urged that in view of the decision of this Court in
Karnail Singh and another v. State of Punjab(1) a conviction
under section 302, read with see-
(1) [1928] I.L.R. 7 Patna 484. (2) A.I.R. 1948 All. 162,
(3) 1954 S.C.R. 904,
155
1212
tion 149, could be converted into a conviction under section
302/34 which the trial Court did. There could be no valid
objection, therefore, to converting a conviction under
section 302/34 into one under section 302 which the High
Court did.’ This argument is unacceptable. The High Court
clearly found that section 34 was not applicable to the
facts of the case and acquitted the other accused under
section 302/34, that is to say the other accused were
wrongly convicted by the trial court in that way but the
appellant should have been convicted under section 302. The
High Court could not do what the trial court itself could
not do, namely, convict under section 302, as no separate
charge had been framed under that section.
It was urged by the Prosecution that under the provisions of
section 236 and section 237 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure a person could be convicted of an offence which he
is shown to have committed although he was not charged with
it. Section 237 of the Code of Criminal Procedure is
entirely dependent on the provisions of section 236 of that
Code. The provisions of section 236 can apply only in cases
where there is no doubt about the facts which can be proved
but a doubt arises as to which of several offences have been
committed on the proved facts in which case any number of
charges can be framed and tried or alternative charges can
be framed. In these circumstances if there had been an
omission to frame a charge, then under section 237, a
conviction could be arrived at on the evidence although no
charge had been framed. In the present case there is no
doubt about the facts and if the allegations against the ap-
pellant that he bad caused the injuries to the deceased with
takwa was established by evidence, then there could be no
doubt that the offence of murder bad been committed. There
was no room for the application of section 236 of the Code
of Criminal Procedure.
It had been argued on behalf of the prosecution that no
finding or sentence pronounced shall be deemed invalid
merely on the ground that no charge was framed. Reliance
was placed on the provisions of section 535 of the code of
criminal procedure
1213
Reference was also made to the provisions of section 537 of
that Code. Section 535 does permit. a court of appeal or
revision to set aside the finding or sentence if in its
opinion the non-framing of a charge has resulted in a
failure of justice. Section 537 also permits a court of
appeal or revision to set aside a finding or sentence if any
error, omission or irregularity in the charge has, in fact,
occasioned a failure of justice. The explanation to the
section no doubt directs that the court shall have regard to
the fact that the objection could and should have been
raised at an earlier stage in the proceedings. In the
present case, however, there is no question of any error,
omission or irregularity in the charge because no charge
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under section 302 of the Indian Penal Code was in fact
framed.. Section 232 of the Code of Criminal Proce. dure
permits an appellate court or a court of revision, if
satisfied that any person convicted of an offence was misled
in his defence in the absence of a charge or by an error in
the charge, to direct a new trial to be had upon a charge
framed in whatever manner it thinks fit. In the present
case we are of the opinion that there was an illegality and
not an irregularity curable by the provisions of sections
535 and 537 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. Assuming,
however, for a moment that there was merely an irregularity
which was curable we are satisfied that, in the circum-
stances of the present case, the irregularity is not curable
because the appellant was misled in his defence by the
absence of a charge under section 302 of the Indian Penal
Code.
By framing a charge under section 302, read with section 149
of the Indian Penal Code against the appellant, the Court
indicated that it was not charging the appellant with the
offence of murder and to convict him for murder and sentence
him under section 302 of the Indian Penal Code was to
convict him of an offence with which he had not been
charged. In defending himself the appellant was not called
upon to meet such a charge and in his defence he may well
have considered it unnecessary to concentrate on that part
of the prosecution ease, Attention has been
1214
drawn to the Medical -evidence. With reference to injury
No. I the doctor stated that the wounds - were not very
clean-cut. It is further pointed out that the other incised
injuries on the head were bone deep. The bone, however, had
not been out. Injuries on the head although inflicted by a
blunt weapon may sometimes assume the characteristics of an
incised wound. Reference was made to Glasgow on Medical
Jurisprudence, 9th Ed., at page 241, where it is stated that
under certain circumstances, and in certain situations on
the body, wounds produced by a blunt instrument may
stimulate the appearance of an incised wound. These wounds
are usually found over the bone which is thinly covered with
tissue, in the regions of the head, forehead, eyebrow,
cheek, and lower jaw, among others. It is also pointed that
Vas Dev P.W. 2 bad admitted that Mitu took away the takwa
from the appellant after Sadhu Ram had been dragged out of
the shop but no takwa blow was given outside the shop.
Prakash Chand P.W. 4, another eye-witness, also- admitted
that Mitu had taken the takwa from the appellant when they
had come out of the shop. It was urged that if a specific
charge for murder had been framed against the appellant, he
would have questioned the doctor more closely about the
incised injuries on the head of the deceased, as well as the
prosecution witnesses. It is difficult to hold in the
circumstances of the present case that the appellant was not
prejudiced by the non-framing of a charge under section 302,
Indian Penal Code.
Having regard to the view expressed on the question of law,
it is unnecessary to refer to the arguments on the facts.
The appeal is accordingly allowed and the conviction and the
sentence of the appellant is set aside and the case of the
appellant is remanded to the court of Sessions at Jullundur
for retrial after framing a charge under section 302 of the
Indian Penal Code and in accordance with law.
Appeal allowed.
1215
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