Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
VIJAYAN @ VIJAYAKUMAR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE REP.BY INSPECTOR OF POLICE
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 22/03/2000
BENCH:
D.P.Mohapatra, K.T.Thomas
JUDGMENT:
Thomas J.
Out of six persons arraigned before a Sessions Court
for the murder of one Natarajan, one alone was convicted and
the rest were acquitted. The High Court of Madras confirmed
the conviction and sentence (imprisonment for life). His
plea of right of private defence was denounced by the trial
court as well as the High Court. The said sole convict,
Vijayan, is the appellant before us.
The 5th of October, 1984 was an eventful day for the
rival factions one of which the appellant belongs to. A
series of events took place on that day which ended up with
the death of Natarajan at about 2.30 pm. It gave rise to
the present case.
Prosecution and the defence were in substantial
agreement regarding the narrative of the events till the
penultimate stage. But they differed grossly with each
other regarding the final stage in which fatal injury was
inflicted on the deceased to which he succumbed in a few
minutes.
The following part of the story is, by and large,
undisputed. Natarajan and his brother PW1-Kandaswamy were
residents of a place called Edayankattuvalasu in Erode town
(Tamil Nadu). Their neighbour was Periyanna. He and his
children were residing in adjacent houses. Appellant
Vijayan is one of the sons of Pariyanna. All the houses of
the above persons were on the southern side of a road
(Nasianur road) at Erode town.
PW1- Kandaswamy and deceased Natarajan laid stone
slabs over a drainage which passed through a private passage
leading to the houses of all the above persons. Those stone
slabs caused stagnation of water during rainy season and it
affected Periyannas building. So his sons requested the
other party to remove the stone slabs. But none of such
requests was heeded to.
On the morning of 5.10.1984 appellant-Vijayan and his
brothers forcibly removed those stone slabs. On coming to
know of it PW1-Kandaswamy along with his brother Natarajan
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and father Kuppuswamy went to the house of Periyanna and
questioned their act. It led to an altercation during which
one belonging to the appellants faction slapped twice on
the cheek of Kuppuswamy the father of PW1 and deceased. As
some neighbours intervened then PW1-Kandaswamy and deceased
went back to their house with Kuppuswamy. All those
incidents happened before noon hours.
The above events are not in dispute, but as to what
happened thereafter we have before us two diametrically
divergent versions. According to the prosecution, the
following incidents happened thereafter:
At about 2.30 pm the deceased Natarajan was walking
along Nasianur road towards east. He was followed by PW1
Kandaswamy, who was followed by his father-in-law
PW2-Chenniappan. As the deceased passed the house of
Periyanna six assailants emerged out of that house armed
with knives, spear and sickles etc. Sensing danger at the
sight of the onrushing assailants Natarajan made a
right-about-turn and scampered towards west but the
assailants chased him and intercepted him and pushed him
down. After he fell he was stabbed by the appellant with a
knife on the back and also on the front chest. Appellant’s
brother Thilakan (second accused in the case) aimed a blow
with a spear on Natarajan but it missed the target and fell
on the crown of appellants head who also fell down.
Deceased Natarajan who sustained a stab injury on the chest
died at the spot.
The rival version, presented by the appellant, is the
following: At about 2.30 pm deceased Natarajan and his
brother PW1- Kandaswamy accompanied by a gang of others went
to the house of Periyanna in retaliation for the forenoon
incident. At the front portion of the house they attacked
the appellant which was resisted, but still the appellant
sustained injuries. It was then that appellant and others
acted in self-defence.
In support of the prosecution version PW1(Kandaswamy),
PW2 (Chenniappan) father-in-law of PW1 and PW3 (Poosappan)
were examined. They supported the case of the prosecution
which they described in the same manner as it has been
narrated above. Trial court and the High Court accepted
their evidence and found the prosecution story to be true.
Post-mortem certificate issued by PW6 (Dr.
S.Velmurugan) showed that the deceased had two injuries, one
of which was a stab wound on the left chest which pierced
the upper lobe of left lung and the left pulmonary artery
was completely cut. The other injury was a stab wound on
the left chest, but its depth was only 1 cm. The doctor has
rightly opined that the first injury was necessarily fatal
and the injured could not have survived for more than a
couple of minutes thereafter.
PW6 - Dr.S.Velmurugan, a Civil Assistant Surgeon of
Government Hospital, Erode, had deposed that appellant
Vijayan met him at 3 pm on 5.10.1984 with a lacerated injury
(2 x ½ x ½) over the mid parietal region of the scalp, and
some abrasions over the right knee, right index finger and
on the dorsum of the foot.
The details of those injuries were written in Ex.P5
Accident Register. But the more important aspect of the
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evidence of PW6-doctor is this: Appellant told him then
that he received those injuries at 2.45 pm at his own
residence when three assailants assaulted him with pitchuva
and a screw driver.
On the defence side one Dr. Muruges (Radiologist in
the Government Hospital), Erode) was examined as DW1. But
his evidence is not of much use because he said that the
X-Ray did not reveal any fracture for the appellant. Two
more witnesses were examined for the defence, one among them
was a lady (DW2-Devaki) who said that she and PW3-Poosappan
were at Salem on 5.10.1984 afternoon for execution of some
documents in connection with a lorry transaction. She
proved Ex.D2, a sale receipt bearing the signature of PW3-
Poosappan dated 5.10.1984.
In fact, when PW3-Poosappan was examined he was asked
about the said lorry transaction. Though he admitted having
sold the lorry mentioned in that receipt to DW2-Devaki he
denied having gone to Salem on 5.10.1984 for that lorry
deal.
If PW3-Poosappan was present at Salem at 4.00 pm there
is no doubt that he could not have been present at Erode at
2.30 pm. The trial court and the High Court did not place
reliance on Ex.D2- receipt nor on the testimony of DW2-
Devaki. Regarding that evidence High Court has observed
that it is also likely that the signature of PW3-Poosappan
was obtained in Ex.D2 much earlier with blank date and the
document was got up on that occasion. The reason for so
holding is that PW3-Poosappan was recorded as present at the
scene of occurrence when the inquest was held by
PW16-Investigating Officer (The Inquest Report says that it
was prepared between 5.00 pm and 8.00 pm on 5.10.1984).
The above reasoning of the High Court was strongly
assailed by Shri N.Natarajan, learned Senior Counsel who
argued for the appellant which he dubbed as putting the cart
before the horse because the very object of examining
DW2-Devaki was to show that PW3-Poosappan was not present at
the scene of occurrence. It is contended that if it could
be inferred that PW3 would not have been present at Salem on
the premise that he was shown in the Inquest Report as
present during the inquest, it could as well be inferred
from Ex.D2 receipt that PW3 would not have been present at
the scene of occurrence during the time of execution of
Ex.D2. Inference, if could be made this way, it could be
the other way around as well, contended the learned counsel.
For considering the evidence of DW2-Devaki, we have
first to address ourselves whether such an item of evidence
is legally admissible.
Section 153 of the Evidence Act is titled as
Exclusion of evidence to contradict answers to questions
testing veracity. The main body of the Section reads thus:
When a witness has been asked and has answered any
question which is relevant to the inquiry only in so far as
it tends to shake his credit by injuring his character, no
evidence shall be given to contradict him; but, if he
answers falsely, he may afterwards be charged with giving
false evidence.
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Section 153 is based on the decision rendered by
Pollock CB in Attorney General v. Hitchock (1847 (1) Ex.91)
in which the learned Judge observed that a witness may be
contradicted as to anything he denies having said provided
it be connected with the issue as a matter capable of being
distinctly given in evidence, or it must be so far connected
with it as to be a matter which, if answered in a particular
way, would contradict a part of the witnesss testimony, and
if it is neither the one nor the other of these, it is
collateral to though in some sense it may be considered as
connected with, the subject of enquiry. The rule limiting
the right to call evidence to contradict a witness on
collateral issues excludes all evidence of facts which are
incapable of affording any reasonable presumption or
inference as to the principal matter in dispute.
But the above rule of prohibition has exceptions which
can be discerned from the Section itself. Among the four
illustrations enumerated in the Section one of them
(illustration C) is relevant in this context which is
extracted below: A affirms that on a certain day he saw B
at Lahore. A is asked whether he himself was not on that
day at Calcutta. He denies it. Evidence is offered to show
that A was on that day at Calcutta. The evidence is
admissible, not as contradicting A on a fact which affects
his credit, but as contradicting the alleged fact that B was
seen on the day in question in Lahore.
Thus when the issue is whether PW3-Poosappan was
present at the scene of occurrence evidence can be offered
to show that at the very time he was at a different place.
Evidence of that type is not aimed at shaking the credit of
the witness by injuring his character. It affects the
veracity of the testimony irrespective of his character.
Looking at the evidence of DW2-Devaki from the above
perspective, it is admissble in evidence and hence the next
question is whether it is a reliable item of evidence. The
High Court felt that it is not reliable mainly because of
the fact that PW3-Poosappan is recorded as present at the
inquest which is shown to have been held at 5.00 pm.
Learned counsel for the appellant highlighted the fact
that the name of PW3-Poosappan was not mentioned anywhere in
the First Information Statement lodged by PW1-Kandaswamy.
According to the learned counsel PW3 was a later addition to
the case. The FIR reached the magistrate concerned on the
same night at 9.00 pm. But the Inquest Report was not sent
along with it, perhaps it was not then ready for despatch.
But it was sent to the magistrate on the next day at 9.00
pm. Why it was sent to the magistrate at such an odd time?
That document is not like the FIR about which utmost
promptitude is a requirement of law for despatching to the
magistrate. Learned counsel contended that despatching the
Inquest Report to the magistrate on the next day at 9.00 pm
would, in the circumstances, only lead to the inference that
it would not have come into existence on the night of
5.10.1984.
Whether the said contention can be accepted as correct
or not, we are of the view that authenticity of D2- sale
receipt should not stand solely on the premise that
PW3-Poosappan was noted as present in the Inquest Report.
In this context a vital circumstance, which the
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accused has brought on record, has to be adverted to.
DW3-photographer said that he was engaged by someone in the
house of Periyanna to take photographs of the inside of that
house. On 5.10.1984 at 5.00 pm he took such photographs
from different angles. Ex. D3 and D4 series are those
photographs. He said in evidence that he then saw blood
stains in the front portion of the house and in the portico
also. Ex.D5-Cash Bill dated 5.10.1984 marked through him
shows the amount collected by the witness for the work done.
The Public Prosecutor who cross-examined the witness
suggested to him that what he saw on the floor of the house
was not blood marks but it could have been some chemical
substance. The said suggestion indicates that even the
Public Prosecutor did not dispute the fact that the
photographer had taken the photos on 5.10.1984. However,
the suggestion that what he saw was only some chemical
element seems to be too baseless for countenance.
While considering the right of private defence
advanced by the appellant, the defence version that deceased
and his party had tress-passed into Periyannas house and
made a retaliatory attack for the forenoon incident has to
be looked at. That version of the appellant had come on
official record at 3.00 pm when appellant told like that to
PW6-Doctor. We do not think that appellant would have had
sufficient time to concoct a false story to tell the doctor
so soon after the incident.
When the Investigating Officer came to know of such a
version of the appellant one would expect him to check up
the house of Periyanna to see whether the said version of
the appellant was true. But PW16 did not produce any
document whatsoever to convince the Court that he did make
such examination of the place of occurrence as mentioned by
the appellant at the earliest. Though PW16-Investigating
Officer made a bid to say that he inspected the house while
conducting a search on the same evening it cannot be
believed for a moment because no search memorandum was made,
no search-list was drawn up and no witness was collected to
be present then. It is only the ipsi dixit of PW16
Investigating officer unsupported by even a scrap of paper
that he inspected the house of the accused.
That apart, the injuries sustained by the appellant
(extracted supra) were sought to be explained by the
prosecution in a very clumsy manner (in the FIR there is no
reference to the fact that the appellant sustained any such
injury during the incident). While giving evidence in the
Court PW1 and other prosecution witnesses for the occurrence
said that appellant sustained those injuries when second
accused Thilakan aimed to inflict a stab injury on the
fallen deceased but it miss-struck on the crown of the head
of appellant. Even assuming that second accused Thilakan
would have been a bad striker it is difficult to conceive
that such an aim fumbling whacking would have landed on the
crown of another mans head.
A poignant circumstance, which it is impossible to
ignore, is the normal human reaction for the forenoon
incident. If father of the deceased was slapped then
craving for vengeance would definitely have been on the
injured party of the forenoon episode. When that
circumstance is taken along with the other broad
circumstances adverted to above, the case of appellant that
deceased and PW1 together with their henchmen had
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tresspassed into the house of the appellant for a
retaliatory onslaught, appears to be a probable story.
Hence, we are disposed to believe the defence version that
deceased was the aggressor.
Though a contention has been advanced on behalf of the
respondent that even in such a situation appellant had
exceeded his right of private defence, we reject the
contention because in the broad spectrum of the case it is
not possible to precisely measure the frontier up to which
the right of private defence could have been stretched.
We are, therefore, inclined to give judicial
imprimatur to the plea of right of private defence advanced
by the appellant and hold him not guilty of the offence of
murder. In the result we allow this appeal and set aside
the conviction and sentence passed on the appellant and
acquit him. The bail-bond will stand cancelled.