Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAM NATH MAHTO
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF BIHAR
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 10/04/1996
BENCH:
PUNCHHI, M.M.
BENCH:
PUNCHHI, M.M.
MANOHAR SUJATA V. (J)
CITATION:
1996 SCALE (3)441
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
O R D E R
The conviction of the appellant under Section 396 IPC
initially visited him with a life sentence, as ordered by
the Court of Session, but on appeal to the High Court, it
was reduced to ten years’ rigorous imprisonment. _
It was a night robbery in a running train. The
appellant was allegedly one of the dacoits. A person was
killed during the course of commission of dacoity and the
dacoits caused hurts to others and looted their property.
P.W.6, Diwakar Yadav, was one such person who was robbed.
The Train Ticket Examiner, P.W.3, was also one of the
occupants in the train who was injured. The occurrence took
place shortly after the train left Keshar station for its
onward journey to Calcutta. This incident happened in the
State of Bihar. The matter was reported to the police by
P.W.3. The appellant, was later arrested as one of the
culprits. He was put to identification parade conducted by
Judicial Magistrate. Bharatji Misra, P.W.7. Thereat, P.W.6
was able to identify the appellant as one of the dacoits
besides others, with whom we are presently not concerned
with, and claimed that he was the one who had a revolver
with him which he employed during the course of the
occurrence.
At the trial P.W.7 fully supported the prosecution
case, deposing that P.W.6 had before him identified the
appellant as the dacoit carrying a revolver. P.W.6, however,
chose not to identify the appellant at the trial and rather
said that he could not recognize the accused whom he had
identified at the indentification parade. When his pointed
attention was drawn towards the appellant, he did not
identify him. At that juncture, the trial judge recorded his
remarks as to his demeanor that the witness perhaps was
afraid of the accused. It thus became evident that the
witness was frightened to accord recognition to the
appellant at the trial. Despite such bend in the prosecution
case, the trial court as also the High Court relied on the
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statement of the Magistrate, P.W.7 as to P.W.6 having
identified the appellant before him at the identification
parade and held the prosecution case proved beyond doubt.
Added thereto was the remark of the trial court about the
demeanor of the witness P.W.6.
As was done before the courts below, learned counsel
for the appellant has relied upon a decision of this Court
in Budhsen & Anr. vs. State of U.P. - AIR 1970 SC 1321 to
contend that the evidence of identification parade does not
constitute by itself substantive evidence which is governed
essentially by the provisions of Section 162 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure. In that case, this Court took the view
that on the facts established , the Test Identification
Parade could not be considered to provide safe and
trustworthy evidence on which conviction could be sustained.
That case was distinguished by the courts below and in our
view rightly, by taking into account the substantive
evidence of the Magistrate, P.W.7, supported by the remarks
of the trial court regarding demeanor of P.W.6 there can be
no dispute to the proposition that oral evidence led at the
trial may by itself be substantive evidence whereas evidence
of Test Identification Parade may per se be not. In that
situation, the Court would certainly be entitled to rely
upon such evidence as that would be relevant under Section
of the Evidence Act. Here have, as said before, the evidence
of the Magistrate, P.W.7 to support the prosecution evidence
to that he conducted the identification parade and before
him P.W.6 had correctly identified Ram Nath to be one of the
dacoits. And the word of P.W.7 In the context has been
believed by the courts below.
For the foregoing reasons, we do not differ from the
view taken by the High Court in maintaining the conviction
of the of the appellant. The appeal therefore fails and is
hereby dismissed. The appellant is on bail. He shall
surrender to his bail bonds.