Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 1439 of 2004
PETITIONER:
RAGHUNANDAN
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 27/08/2007
BENCH:
C.K. THAKKER & D.K. JAIN
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
C.K. THAKKER, J.
1. This appeal is filed by the appellant-original
accused No. 2 against the judgment and order of
conviction dated July 2, 1991 passed by the Addl.
Sessions Judge, Sidhi in Sessions Case No. 78 of 1990
and confirmed by the High Court of Madhya Pradesh,
Jabalpur on July 7, 2003 in Criminal Appeal No. 812 of
1991. By these orders, both the Courts convicted the
appellant for an offence punishable under Section 302 of
Indian Penal Code (\021IPC\022 for short) and awarded sentence
of imprisonment for life and to pay a fine of Rs.1000/-, in
default of payment, to suffer further rigorous
imprisonment for three months.
2. The case of the prosecution was that in the
morning of May 6, 1990, Manfer (hereinafter referred to
as the \021deceased\022) was in his house. The appellant
(original accused No.2) came to the house of the deceased
and asked him that one Sakkhu (original accused No.1)
was calling him. The deceased went with the appellant.
Till afternoon, the deceased did not come back from the
house of the appellant for taking meal. Buddhsen-PW1,
son of the deceased, hence, went to the house of the
appellant for calling his father. There he saw that the
appellant had mounted on the chest of the deceased and
Sakkhu had chopped off the neck of the deceased.
Manfer died on account of assault perpetrated on him
and cutting of the neck. Buddhsen raised alarm and the
accused persons fled away from the place. PW2-Faguni,
wife of Manfer came in search of Manfer to the house of
the appellant where she found her husband lying dead.
Dadua-PW3, another son of Manfer also reached there.
Other persons assembled at the place of occurrence and
witnessed dead body of Manfer lying in the house of the
appellant with injury on his neck present. It was also the
case of the prosecution that before committing murder of
Manfer, accused persons had caused Manfer to consume
liquor. The motive, according to the prosecution, was that
Manfer had not got married his son Dadua-PW3 with the
daughter of the appellant. The appellant, therefore, had
animosity against Manfer due to which he, alongwith
Sakkhu, caused murder of Manfer.
3. PW1-Buddhsen lodged First Information
Report (FIR) (Ex.P-1) of the incident at Sidhi Police
Station. A.K. Dwivedi-PW6, Town Inspector, Kotwali,
Sidhi, conducted investigation, visited the place of
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occurrence, prepared inquest panchnama of dead body of
Manfer and seized plain as well as bloodstained earth
from the place in the house of the appellant. He also
seized two empty bottles of liquor and a glass. Dead body
of Manfer was then sent through PW5-Constable
Rajkumar Singh to hospital, Sidhi. PW7-Dr. H.P. Singh
conducted the postmortem examination of the dead body
and gave his report (Ex.P-12). Viscera of Manfer was also
collected and sealed. Dhoti and Baniyan were taken off
from the dead body of Manfer and were sealed and sent
to the Police Station. The said articles were forwarded for
chemical examination. Both the accused were then
arrested on May 8, 1990. At the behest of Sakkhu, a
knife said to have been used for commission of the crime
was recovered. Seized clothes, viscera, bloodstained and
plain earth, bottles and glass and knife were sent for
examination to Forensic Science Laboratory, Sagar. After
completion of investigation, challan was filed against the
accused. The Chief Judicial Magistrate, Sidhi committed
the case to the Sessions Court for trial.
4. The accused were charged for an offence
punishable under Section 302 read with Section 34 IPC.
Both the accused, however, denied their guilt and
claimed to be tried. According to them, they were falsely
implicated in the case. The appellant herein denied the
fact that he had taken Manfer to his house. Accused
Sakkhu asserted that having learnt about the incident,
he went along with PW1-Buddhsen to lodge a report at
the police station. He stated that he was watchman at
jungle and did not allow Buddhsen and others to pasture
their cattle in jungle. Due to that animosity, he was
falsely involved in the case. According to him, he was not
present in the house of the appellant and he had gone to
seek his calf and subsequently he learnt about the death
of Manfer. No defence witness was examined by the
accused persons.
5. The trial Court, on the basis of evidence
adduced by the prosecution, held that Manfer died
homicidal death. The trial Court also held that from the
facts and circumstances of the case, it could not be said
that PW1-Buddhsen had seen the incident and he was an
eye witness. Keeping in view omissions on the part of
PW1-Buddhsen about certain facts in his first version
and later on in his substantive evidence before the Court,
the trial Court held that it could not be said that PW1-
Buddhsen had witnessed the occurrence. But,
considering the circumstances in their entirety, including
the testimony of PW4-Pardesi who was an independent
witness, the trial Court held that it was proved beyond
reasonable doubt and the chain of circumstances was
complete to connect the present appellant (accused
No.2)s with the crime. The Court, however, held that
there was no reliable evidence against co-accused
Sakkhu (accused No.1). He was, therefore, ordered to be
acquitted.
6. Being aggrieved by the order of conviction and
sentence, the appellant herein preferred an appeal before
the High Court and the High Court also confirmed the
order passed by the trial Court holding that it was proved
beyond doubt that the appellant had committed murder
of deceased Manfer.
7. On February 9, 2004, notice was issued by
this Court and thereafter on December 3, 2004, leave
was granted. The matter has now been placed before us
for final hearing.
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8. We have heard learned counsel for the parties.
9. Learned counsel for the appellant submitted
that both the Courts had committed an error in recording
conviction against the appellant and in imposing
sentence on him. He submitted that when the evidence of
PW1-Buddhsen, who claimed himself to be an eye
witness to the incident was not believed, there was no
evidence worth the name on the basis of which the
appellant could have been convicted. It was also
submitted that when on appreciation of prosecution
evidence, co-accused-Sakkhu was acquitted, the Courts
could not have convicted the appellant for the offence
punishable under Section 302 IPC on the same evidence.
The counsel urged that it was the case of the appellant
from the beginning that he was falsely charged and since
the chain of circumstances was not unbroken and intact,
benefit of doubt ought to have been given to the
appellant. It was, therefore, prayed that the appeal be
allowed and the appellant be ordered to be acquitted.
10. The learned counsel for the State, on the other
hand, supported the order of conviction and sentence
recorded by the trial Court and confirmed by the High
Court. He submitted that evidence of PW1-Buddhsen was
not relied upon because of omission of certain facts in
the FIR and in the police statement which he stated later
on in his substantive evidence before the Court. But
both the Courts were right in relying upon circumstantial
evidence and in observing the chain of circumstances to
be complete and link unbroken. So far as motive is
concerned, it has come in evidence that since the
deceased Manfer and his family members did not approve
the act of the accused of getting his daughter married to
Dadua-son of the deceased, the appellant had animosity
against the deceased. He, therefore, killed Manfer. There
is ample evidence to show that accused took deceased
with him at his residence on the day of incident and the
said fact is proved beyond reasonable doubt from the
prosecution evidence of Buddhsen-PW1, Faguni-PW2,
Dadua-PW3 and also PW4-Pardesi an independent
witness. It was, therefore, submitted that the appeal
deserves to be dismissed.
11. Having heard learned counsel for the parties,
in our opinion, it cannot be said that by convicting the
appellant-accused any illegality is committed either by
the trial Court or by the High Court. It is true that both
the Courts have held that no implicit reliance can be
placed on evidence of PW1-Buddhsen-son of the
deceased when he claimed to be an eye witness seeing
accused Nos.1 and 2 killing the deceased. That, however,
does not mean that circumstantial evidence also should
be discarded. As is clear from the judgments of the
Courts below, certain facts were not stated at the initial
stage by PW 1 Buddhsen. The Courts, therefore, did not
accept him to be an eye witness to the incident. In our
opinion, however, both the Courts were right in relying
upon circumstantial evidence. Such circumstances may
be summarized thus:
1. There is ample evidence to show that the
deceased was at his residence and it was the
appellant who went to the deceased at the latter\022s
residence, told him that Sakkhu wanted him and
took the deceased along with him.
2. The evidence of \021last seen together\022 i.e. when the
deceased was taken by the appellant at his
residence. It was seen by PW1-Buddhsen, PW3-
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Dadua, both the sons of the deceased and PW2-
Faguni, widow of the deceased.
3. PW4-Pardesi was an independent witness. He
had seen accused taking Manfer at his residence.
He also heard the shriek of the deceased.
4. Motive of commission of crime i.e., the appellant
wanted his daughter to get married to Dadua-
PW3, son of the deceased but the proposal was
not approved by the deceased, PW2-Faguni,
widow of the deceased and other family members.
5. Medical evidence of Dr. H.P. Singh, PW7 who had
conducted post mortem examination of the
deceased. Dr. Singh had proved the injuries on
the person of the deceased which were
responsible for the death of the deceased.
6. The most important and clinching circumstance
that the dead body of deceased was lying inside
the house of the appellant having serious injuries
on his person.
7. No explanation has been offered by the appellant
as to how the dead body of deceased came inside
his house.
8. Seizure of empty bottles of liquor from the house
of the appellant and the presence of liquor in the
viscera of the deceased which went to support the
allegation of the prosecution that initially the
accused served liquor to the deceased and
thereafter killed him.
12. If, on the basis of all these facts, both the
Courts have come to the conclusion that it was the
appellant who had caused death of Manfer at his
residence, in our opinion, it cannot be said that by taking
such view, any error was committed by them. We see no
infirmity in the order passed by the trial Court and
confirmed by the High Court.
13. For the foregoing reasons, we see no substance
in this appeal filed by the appellant. We hold that the
order of conviction and sentence recorded by the
Sessions Court and confirmed by the High Court is legal
and proper. The appeal deserves to be dismissed and is
accordingly dismissed.
14. Before parting with the matter, we may
observe that the trial court was not right in making
certain remarks against PW1-Buddhsen, son of the
deceased while not accepting his claim to be an eye
witness. The Court, while negativing the assertion of the
witness that he had seen the incident of killing his father
by the accused observed that he had not stated in his
police statement that the appellant sat on the chest of
the deceased and accused Sakkhu had cut his throat
with a knife. To that extent, therefore, the Court was not
wrong. But the Court added that the witness had \021falsely
concocted\022 those facts. In our considered opinion, on the
facts and in the circumstances of the case, the remarks
were ill-founded, unnecessary and uncalled for and the
Court was not justified in making them. All those
remarks are, therefore, ordered to be deleted from the
record.