Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 540 of 1998
PETITIONER:
Gubbala Venugopalaswamy and Ors.
RESPONDENT:
State of Andhra Pradesh
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 06/04/2004
BENCH:
DORAISWAMY RAJU & ARIJIT PASAYAT.
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
ARIJIT PASAYAT, J.
The four appellants described as accused A-1, A-2, A-3
and A-4 faced trial along with three others for alleged
commission of offences punishable under Sections 302, 120B
and 148 of the Indian Penal Code 1860 (for short ’the IPC’).
The Trial Court found the present appellants to be guilty of
offence punishable under Section 302 IPC but not of the
other two offences. Accused A-5 to A-7 were acquitted as the
Trial Court held evidence to be insufficient to hold them
guilty. A-1 was sentenced to undergo life imprisonment with
fine of Rs.2,000/- with default stipulation of six months.
Matter was carried in appeal before the Andhra Pradesh High
Court which by the impugned judgment held A-1 and A-4 guilty
of offence punishable under Section 326 IPC and sentenced
each to undergo RI for 10 years and to pay a fine of
Rs.1,000/- with default stipulation of four months. A-2 was
found guilty of offence punishable under Section 302 IPC by
affirming conviction made and sentence imposed by the Trial
Court. A-3 was convicted of offence punishable under Section
324 IPC and was sentenced to undergo imprisonment for a
period of three years and to pay a fine of Rs.500/- with
default stipulation of two months imprisonment.
Prosecution version as unfolded during trial is as
follows:
All the accused assembled in the house of A-2
(Boorabathula Ramachandra Rao) at about 10.00 a.m. on
31.7.1993 and entered into a criminal conspiracy to kill
Gubballa Sambamurthy (hereinafter referred to as the
’deceased’) on that day itself. Subsequently at 12.00 noon
on the same day A-2 to A-7 assembled again in the house of
one Chelliboyina Venkata Narasamma (examined as PW-5) in
West Kaza village and once again conspired to kill the
deceased when he would be going to Palakol. A-2 brought
knives in a bag and also informed the other accused persons
that A-1 would join them at 3.00 p.m. at the scene of
offence, and pursuant to their criminal conspiracy all the
accused assembled with yerukula knives and formed themselves
into an unlawful assembly at Palakol-Vardhanam road in the
cattle shed of Allam Udayavarlu on the outskirts of Palakol
on the same day at about 3.00 p.m. with the common object of
killing the deceased. At about 3.30 p.m. while the deceased
was going on his cycle from his village West Kaza towards
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Palakol with three empty cement bags to purchase sundry
articles in the shandy at Palakol, all the accused armed
with yerukula knives surrounded him when he came to the
scene of offence and inflicted injuries on him resulting in
his death on the spot. A-1 hacked him on his right side
neck, A-2 hacked him on his right side neck, and A-3 hacked
him on his back; and when the deceased fell down, A-4 hacked
him on his left chest. A-5 hacked him on his right shoulder,
A-6 hacked him below left shoulder and A-7 also hacked him.
At the time of occurrence, the brother of the deceased
Gubbala Sriramamurthy (PW-1), Gubbala Gopalam (PW-2) and
Gubbala Chalapathi (PW-3) all of West Kaza village were
following on two cycles a little behind the deceased, and
witnessed the occurrence, and on seeing them, accused
removed the body of the deceased to the nearby irrigation
body and escaped with their weapons. The scene of occurrence
was on the southern side of the road margin of Palakol-
Vardhanam road in front of the cattle shed of Allam
Udayavarlu on the outskirts of Palakol town. A-1 was the
leader of the Congress-I party and the other accused were
his followers; and the deceased was one of the organizers of
CPM party. Besides political rivalries, there were personal
rivalries between the families of A-1 and the deceased and
number of criminal cases were filed against the persons
belonging to the two parties. On the previous day, i.e. on
30.7.1993, Gubbala Venkataswamy, the brother of A-1,
performed the marriages of his son and daughter, and those
belonging to Congress-I party under the leadership of A-1
did not attend that marriage while the deceased and his
followers attended those marriages in large numbers and made
them a grand success and this precipitated the matters and
led the accused to a conspiracy to kill the deceased.
On completion of investigation charge sheet was filed
and after framing of charges, the trial was taken up. In
order to further its version, prosecution examined 16
witnesses while the accused persons examined 7 witnesses to
substantiate their plea of false implication and innocence.
The Trial Court found that as per prosecution, there were
eye-witnesses PWs 1, 2 and 3, though PWs 2 and 3 resiled
from the statements made during investigation. Primarily
conviction was recorded placing reliance on the evidence of
PW-1 though the Trial Court and the High Court found that
the evidence was not without blemish.
In support of the appeal, learned counsel for the
appellant submitted that Trial Court and the High Court
having accepted that there were exaggerations made by PW-1
and since evidence was not totally reliable, at least some
corroborative evidence should have been led by the
prosecution. The scene of occurrence was not established
and on the contrary, the evidence indicated that the
occurrence did not take at the place and in the manner
prescribed by the prosecution and the defence version was
more probable. The reasons ascribed by the Trial Court to
discard the evidence of PW-3 are equally applicable to PW-1
and no distinction should have been made to accept PW-1’s
version. The conduct of prosecution witnesses and the
evidence tendered by them is clearly unnatural. It is too
much to accept that the accused persons would carry the dead
body when PW-1 was allegedly witnessing the occurrence.
Courts below having considered PW-1 to be not wholly
reliable should have directed acquittal.
In response, learned counsel for the State submitted
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that though PW-1 has not been able to clearly state about
certain aspects, yet portion of his testimony has been found
sufficient by the courts below to fasten guilt on the
accused persons. The conclusions are essentially factual
and two courts below having found the evidence to be
sufficient for the purpose of convicting the accused
persons, no interference is called for. There was no cross-
examination on the aspect regarding presence of PW-1 at
about 1.30 p.m. Though the Trial court and the High Court
found some variations in the evidence yet the overall view
has been taken and no interference is called for on that
score also.
Much stress has been laid by the learned counsel for
the appellants on the alleged unnatural conduct of the
witnesses. We find, as has been found by the courts below,
after finding deceased to have breathed his last the obvious
reaction was to set the law into motion. The plea that FIR
was not lodged at the nearest Police Station is without
substance. It is clearly stated in evidence that a Constable
told the witness that the Inspector is not available and he
was not competent to accept the intimation and had suggested
that the report may be lodged at another Police Station
having jurisdiction.
As a rule of universal application it cannot be said
that when a portion of the prosecution evidence is discarded
as unworthy of credence, there cannot be any conviction. It
is always open to the Court to differentiate between an
accused who has been convicted and those who have been
acquitted. [See Guru Charan Singh and Another v. State of
Punjab (AIR 1956 SC 460) and Sucha Singh and Another v.
State of Punjab (2003 (5) Supreme 445)]. The maxim "Falsus
in uno falsus in omnibus" is merely a rule of caution.
As has been indicated by this Court in Sucha Singh’s case
(supra), in terms of felicitous metaphor, an attempt has to
be made to separate grain from the chaff, truth from
falsehood. When the prosecution is able to establish its
case by acceptable evidence, though in part, the accused can
be convicted even if the co-accused have been acquitted on
the ground that the evidence led was not sufficient to
fasten guilt on them. But where the position is such that
the evidence is totally unreliable, and it will be
impossible to separate truth from falsehood to an extent
that they are inextricably mixed up, and in the process of
separation an absolute new case has to be reconstructed by
divorcing essential details presented by the prosecution
completely from the context and background against which
they are made, conviction cannot be made.
The above position was highlighted in Narain v. State
of M.P. (2004 (2) SCC 455)
We find that PW-1’s version has not been found credible
on certain aspects. But that per se cannot be a ground to
discard his evidence even if it is found to be otherwise
credible. So far as the prosecution version is concerned, he
has ascribed particular roles and acts to the accused
persons. Though PWs 2 and 3 have turned hostile in respect
of part of their evidence, it is fairly settled position in
law that even if part of evidence is discarded, that cannot
be a ground to discard the evidence, more particularly that
part of the evidence which is cogent and credible. The
evidence and subsequent acts have been attributed to A-4 in
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view of the evidence of PW-1 which has remained unaffected,
in spite of the incisive cross-examination. The evidence on
record is sufficient to establish the conviction. But we
find that sentence of 10 years has been awarded for the
offence punishable under Section 326 IPC. It is on the
higher side. Custodial sentence of 5 years to A-1 and A-4
for their conviction under Section 326 IPC would suffice.
In the ultimate result, the appeal filed by A-1 and A-4 are
allowed to the extent of reduction in sentence, and stands
dismissed so far as A-2 and A-3 are concerned.
The appeal is disposed of as indicated above.