Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
PERIASAMI AND ANOTHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF TAMIL NADU
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 25/09/1996
BENCH:
THOMAS K.T. (J)
BENCH:
THOMAS K.T. (J)
ANAND, A.S. (J)
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
THOMAS.J.
We have pronounced the verdict in this appeal on
29.8.1996 by altering the conviction of the two appellants
to the offence under section 304 part I read with section 34
of the IPC and sentencing them each to rigorous imprisonment
for seven years. However, we reserved our reasons thereof
and hence we now state the reasons as under:-
First appellant (Periasamy) and second appellant
(Ramaswamy) were prosacuted along with one Murugesam for
offences under section 302/34 IPC on the allegation that
they with common intention to murder deceased Ranganathan
attached him with billhook, spear and lathi at about 9.30
a.m. on 12.6.1989. Sessions Court acquitted all the three
accused, but the High Court of Madras, on appeal by the
State, set aside the acquittal and convicted the two
appellants under section 302/34 IPC. The other accused
Murugesan was, however, convicted only under section 324
IPC. Appellants have filed this appeal under section 2 of
the Supreme Court (Enlargement of Criminal Appellate)
Jurisdiction Act 1970.
Prosection story, in brief, is the following:-
periasamy (first appellant) is the son and Murugesan is
the nephew of Ramaswamy (second appellant). About five years
prior to the murder, second appellant’s daughter Mallika was
indecently assaulted by deceased Ranganathan for which there
was a criminal case and Ranganathan was convicted in that
case. A couple of years thereafter the plantain crops of
deceased Ranganathan were destroyed by the goats of second
appellant over which there was some altercation between
them. Thus, bad blood existed between the deceased and
second appellant’s family.
On the morning of the occurrence day deceased
Ranganathan in association with four other persons
(including PW1 and PW2 ) engaged themselves in the work of
shifting an oil engine to a field for irrigation purposes.
By about 9.30 a.m. deceased Ranganathan alone went to a
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nearby plantain grove to ease himself. After a little while
PW1 and PW2 heard the squeal of a pig followed by the yells
of Ranganathan. PW1 and PW2 rushed to the place and then
they saw the first appellant inflicting a blow on the neck
of Ranganathan with a billhook and the second appellant
stabbing him with a spear on the chest. When deceased tried
to escape he was assaulted by Murugesan with lathi, Second
appellant again stabbed him with the spear. Deceased fell
down but first appellant cut him on the neck with the
billhook two or three times more. Assailants thereafter took
to their heels. Deceased Murugesan succumbed to his injuries
within an hour.
PW1 went to the local village administrative officer
(PW-8) and informed him of the incident. PW8 went to the
spot of occurrence and verified the correctness of the
information furnished by PW1. After returning to his office
PW8 recorded the statement of PW-1 (Ext.P-1) which was
forwarded to Velur Police Station. FIR was prepared on its
basis and during investigation appellants were arrested. On
completion of the investigation the police charge-sheeted
the appellants and Murugesam arraying them as A1, A2 and A3,
respectively.
PW1 and PW2 are the only eye witnesses examined by the
prosecution PW5 (Gunasekharan) deposed that PW2 rushed to
his house soon after the occurrence and told him of what the
three accused did to the deceased and that he went to the
spot with PW 2 and found his brother badly mauled. He made
efforts to remove the injured to the hospital but his
brother died before reaching the hospital. PW6 said that she
saw the three accused running away from the scene with the
weapons, PW7 said that he over-heard some pedestrians
mumbling between each other that these three accused had
given cut blows to the deceased and a little later he saw
the accused washing themselves and cleaning the weapons
beneath a bridge. PW7 further said that he over-heard a
conversation as between the accused that the weapons should
be concealed and that they should consult a legal
practitioner at Selam.
Learned Sections Judge declined to place reliance on
the teescimony of any of the above witnesses. The delay in
registering the FIR and a recital found in the inquest
report showing the time of death of the deceased as 10.30 in
the night on 12 6..1989 were highlighted by the learned
Sessions Judge.
High Court of Madras in reversal of the order, found
the evidence of PW1 and PW2 trustworthy. Learned Judge also
placed reliance on the testimony of PW5, PW6 and PW7.
Howaver, Court did not accept the prosecution version that
the third accused Murugesan had common intention to murder
the deceased. Hence, the appellants were convicted and
sentenced as aforesaid.
Shri Siva Subramaniam, learned senior counsel who
argued for the appellants has taken us through the material
evidence and advanced several contentions, main among them
is that High Court ought not have lightly intarferred with
the acquital passed by the trial court. Alternatively, he
argued that the conviction should not, in any view of the
matter, have gone beyond the offence of culpable Homicide
not amounting to murder.
After going through the evidence of PW6 and PW7 we too
are not impressed by their testimony. We are in agreement
with the learning Sections Judge that no credit can be given
to their evidence. But the evidence of PW1 and PW2 stands on
a different footing.
The first hurdle which stands in the way of accepting
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PW-1’s evidence is the delay involved in preparing the FIR.
PW8 did not take down the statement of PW1 when it was made
to him, but he went to the spot to ascertain the truth of
account given by PW1. There was the possibility for
deliberations and confabulations. In this context, we may
refer to the observations made by one of us (Dr.Anand J.) in
Meghraj singh vs. State of U.P. 1994 SCC 188.
"The object of insisting upon
prompt lodging of the FIR is to
obtain the earliest information
regarding the circumstance in which
the crime was committed, including
the names of the actual culprits
and the parts played by them , the
weapons if any, used, as also the
names of the eye withnesses if any.
Delay in lodging the FIR often
results in smbellishment. which is
a creature of an afterthought. On
account of delay, the FIR not only
gets bereft of advantage of
spontaneity, danger also creeps in
of the introduction of a coloured
version or exaggerated story."
However, the above weakness attached to Ext.P-1 is not
enough to vitiate the entire testimony of PW-1. We have to
see whether assurance can be obtained from other evidence
regarding the truth of his version.
PW-2 also said that he saw the appellants striking the
deceased with the weapons when he went to the scene along
with PW1. His evidence is consistent with the testimony of
PW-1. It is appropriate, in this context, to refer to PW-5
(Gunasekharan) who is the brother of the deceased. He said
that by about 9.30 A.M. PW-2 ran to his house and told him
that the three accused had dealt blows on Ranganathan with
billhook, spear and stick. PW-5 then rushed to the scene and
saw the deceased lying badly mauled. The witness, then
narrated the efforts made to take his injured brother to the
hospital and how the efforts failed. The testimony of PW-5
inspires confidence. It renders the version of PW-2 also
believable.
The recital in the lnquest report regarding the time of
death of the decceased as 10.30 P.M. on 12.6.1989 has no
utility whatsoever now. Firstly, because the said recital in
the inquest report is only a reproduction of what witnesses
would have told the investigating officer. It falls within
the sweep of the interdict contained in section 162 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure (for short ’the code’) and hence
could not be used for any purpose (except to contradict its
author). The mere fact that such a rscital found a place in
the inquest report is not enough to save it from the
prohibition provided in the section. Secondly, even
otherwise we are satisfied that the time 10.30 P.M. shown in
the inquest report is only a mistake for 10.30 A.M. and
hence no implication would flow out of such an error.
Learned counsel contended that evidence of the eye
witnesses is in conflict with the medical evidence and hence
the sessions judge has rightly discarded it. Both eye-
witnesses ( PW-1 & PW-2) said that first appellant inflicted
three cuts with the billhook on the neck, but only one
incised injury was noted by the doctors on the neck of the
deceased. The description of that injury in the post-mortem
certificate is this:
"An incised wound 20cm x 10cm x
19cm over the left side of the neck
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extending from the left side of the
clavicle to the nape of the neck.
Muscles and blood vessels were cut.
Cervical vertebra was cut at C5."
When Dr. Ilango (PW-3) was asked in cross-examination
whether such injury can be caused in one cut he answered in
the affirmative. But no question was put to the doctor
whether the said injury could as well have been the result
of multiplicity of cuts on the same situs. Looking at the
width of the injury as 10 cm. extending from left clavicle
upto the nape of the neck having a depth of 19 cm. involving
blood-vessles and also the 5th cervical vertibra we have no
difficulty in countenancing the possibility of multiple
blows with a billhook resulting in that injury.
We, therefore concur with the conclusion of the High
Court that appellants have inflicted the fatal injuries on
the deceased with lethal weapons and find no conflict
between the occular testimony and the medical evidence.
We shall now deal with the alternative contention
advanced by Sri Siva Subramaniam, learned senior counsel,
that the offence would not go above section 304 part 1 of
the IPC. This contention is made on the premise that
deceased was the aggressor in the incident and hence
appellant had initial right of private defence though they
would have exceeded that right. We may point out that
appellants have not stated, when examined under section 313
cf the Code, that they have acted in exercise of such right.
Of course, absence of such a specific plea in the statement
is not enough to denude them of the right if the same can he
made out otherwise.
While dealing with the said alternative contention we
have to bear in mind section 105 of the Evidence Act. A rule
of burden of proof is prescribed therein that the burden is
on the accused to prove the existence of circumstances
bringing the case within any of the exceptions "and the
Court shall presume the absence of such circumstancs. "The
said rule does not whittle down the axiomatic rule of burden
(indicated in section 101) that the prosecution must prove
that the accused has committed the offence charged against.
The traditional rule that it is For prosecution to prove the
offence beyond reasonable doubt applies in all criminal
cases except where any particular statute prescribes
otherwise. The legal presumption created in section 105 with
the words "the Court shall presume the absence of such
circumstances" is not intended to displace the aforesaid
traditional burden of the prosecution. It is only where the
prosecution has proved its case with reasonable certainity
that the court can rest on the presumption regarding absence
of circumstances bringing the case with any of the
exceptions. This presumption helps the Court to determine on
whom is the burden to prove facts necessary to attract the
exception and an accused can discharge the burden by
’preponderance of probabilities’ unlike the prosecution. But
there is no presumption that an accused is the aggressor in
every case of homicide. If there is any reasonable doubt,
even from prosecution evidence, that the aggressor in the
occurrence was not the accused but would have been the
deceased party, then benefit of that reasonable doubt has to
be extended to the accussed, no matter he did not adduce any
evidnece in that direction.
The above legal position has been succintly stated by
Subbarao J. (as he then was ) in a case where an accused
pleaded the excepetion under section 84 IPC
(Dahyabhai Chhaganbhai Thakkar vs. State of Gujarat:
AIR 1964 SC 1563):
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"The prosecution, therefore, in a
case of homicide shall prove beyond
reasonable doubt that the accused
caused with the requisite intention
described in S.299 of the Penal
Code. This general burden never
shifts and it always restson the
prosecution
...................................
.....If the material placed before
the court, such as, oral and
documentary evidence, presumptions,
admissions or even the prosecution
evidence, satisfies the test of
"prudent man", the accused will
have discharged his burden. The
evidence soplaced may not be
sufficient to discharge the burden
under section 105 of the Evidence
Act, but it may raise a reasonable
doubt in the mind of a judge as
regards, one or other of the
necessary ingredients of the
offense itself".
In Partap vs. The State of Uttar Pradesh 1976 (2) SCC
798 a three judges bench was considering a case where the
accused failed to adduce evidence to establish the under
section 95 IPC. It was held that even if the accused failed
to establish his plea, in a case where prosecution has not
established its case beyond reasonable doubt against the
appellant on an essential ingredient of the offence of
murder, the plea of right of private defence cannot
reasonably be ruled out from prosecution evidence the
benefit of it must go to the accused. In Yogendra Morarji
vs. The State of Gujarat: (AIR 1980 SC 660 ) another bench
of three judges of this Court deal with section 105 of the
Evidence Act and observed thus:
"Nothwithstanding the failure of
the accused to establish positively
the existence of circumstances
which would bring his case within
an Exception, the circumstances
proved by him may raise a
reasonable doubt with regard to one
or more of the necessary
ingredients of the offence itself
with which the accused stands
charged. Thus, there may be cases
where, despite the failure of the
accused to discharge his burden
under section 105 the material
brought on the record may, in the
totality of the facts and
cicumstances of the case, be enough
to induce in the mind of the Court
a reasonable doubt with regard to
the mens tea requisite for an
offence under section 299 of the
Code".
Keeping the above legal position in mind, we
scrutinised the evidence to ascertain whether the deceased
could have been the aggressor. Neither PW1 nor PW2 could say
how the occurrence started. The possibility that before they
reached the place, some events would have already taken
place cannot be ruled out. PW1 and PW2 over-heard the squeal
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of a pig. They also over-heard the sound of a quarrel. When
they reached the scene they saw the carcass of a slain pig
lying nearby. The motive suggested by the prosecution was
sufficient for the deceased as well to entertain animus
towards second appellant. Further, both sides would have
confronted with each other on that morning abruptly without
any prior knowledge or inkling that deceased might go to the
plantain grove at the crucial time for answering the call of
nature.
The above circumstances are broad enough to instil
reasonable doubt in our mind that accused would have picked
up a quarrel with the second appellant and then the other
events had followed. Law entitles the appellants to have
benefit of that reasonable doubt concerning the begining
part of the occurrence and renders them liable for culpable
homicide not amounting to murder.
The above are our reasons to alter the conviction to
section 304 part 1 of IPC and for imposing a sentence of
rigorous imprisonment for seven years on each of them.