Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
DARYA SINGH AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF PUNJAB
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
25/04/1963
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
WANCHOO, K.N.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
CITATION:
1965 AIR 328 1964 SCR (7) 397
CITATOR INFO :
R 1968 SC1402 (13)
ACT:
Criminal Trial-Murder-Eye witnesses relatives of the Victim-
Evidence of interested and hostile witnesses-Necessity of
corroboration-Exercise of powers of the court under s. 540
of the Code of Criminal Procedure-Indian Penal Code (Act XLV
of 1860) s. 302-Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 (Act 5 of
1898), ss. 172, 540.
HEADNOTE:
The appellants alongwith their brother Ratti Ram were
alleged to have committed the murder of Inder Singh by
inflicting serious injuries with lathi and gandasa. The
prosecution case was that while he was being assaulted,Inder
Singh raised an alarm. upon which his brother Dalip Singh
(P.W.2), his wife Dharam Devi (P.W.4) and his son Shamsher
Singh (P.W.3) rushed to the scene of the offence but out of
fear they had not the courage to go to the rescue of the
victim. After
(1) (1911) 16 a W. N, 327
398
the assailants left the place, they went near him and found
him dead. An information was lodged and after investigation
the appellants alongwith their brother were put on trial
before the Sessions Judge for an offence under s. 302 read
with s. 34 of the Indian Penal Code, as a result of which
Ratti Ram was acquitted and the appellants were convicted
and sentenced to imprisonment for life. On appeal, the High
Court confirmed the conviction and sentence passed against
the appellants. The State appeal challenging the acquittal
of Ratti Ram was also dismissed. On appeal by special leave
the appellants contended that in law the evidence of
interested and hostile witnesses cannot be accepted without
corroboration and, therefore, the High Court erred in
accepting the evidence of the three eyewitnesses.
Held that on principle it is difficult to accept the plea
that if a witness is shown to be a relative of the deceased
and it is also shown that he shared the hostility of the
victim towards the assailant his evidence can never be
accepted unless it is corroborated on material particulars.
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It would be impossible to hold that such witnesses are no
better than accomplices and that their evidence, as a matter
of law, must receive corroboration before it is accepted.
That is not to say that the evidence of such witnesses
should be accepted lightheartedly without very close and
careful examination.
If the offence has taken place, as in the present case, in
front of the house of the victim, the fact that on hearing
his shouts, his relations rushed out of the house cannot be
ruled out as being improbable, and so, the presence of the
three eye-witnesses cannot be properly characterised as
unlikely.
Rameshwar v. The State of Rajasthan, [1952] S.C.R, 377
Lachman Singh v. The State, [1952] S.C.R. 839, Karnail Singh
v. The. State of Punjab, [1954] S.C.R. 904 and Vaikuntam
Chandrappa v. The State of Andhra Pradesh, A.I.R. 1960 S.C.
1340, held inapplicable.
Held further, that the powers of the court under s. 540 can
and ought to be exercised in the interests of justice when-
ever the court feels that the interests of justice so
require, but that does not mean that the failure of the
court to have exercised its powers under s. 540 has
introduced a serious infirmity in the trial itself.
In the present case, there is no justification for the
assumption that any eye-witness has been kept back from the
399
court, and so, the case cannot be sent back on the
hypothetical ground that the scrutiny of the police diary
may disclose the presence of an independent eye witness.
The appeal therefore, must be dismissed.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeal No. 27 of
1962.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
August 24, 1961 of the Punjab High Court in Criminal Appeal
No. 146 of 1961.
T.R. Bhasin, for the appellants.
Gopal Singh and P.D. Menon, for the respondent.
1963. April 25. The judgment of the Court was delivered by
GAJENDRAGADKAR. J.-The three appellants, Darya Singh,
Rasala and Pehlada, along with their brother Ratti Ram were
tried by the- learned Sessions judge, Patiala, under section
302 read with s. 34 of the Indian Penal Code for having
committed the murder of Inder Singh in the village of Petwar
in the early hours of the morning of June 2, 1960. The
learned Sessions Judge acquitted Ratti Ram, because he held
that the case against him had not been proved beyond a
reasonable doubt. He, however, convicted the three
appellants and sentenced them to imprisonment for life.
This order of conviction and sentence was challenged by the
appellants by preferring an appeal before the Punjab High
Court. The High Court agreed with the conclusion of the
learned trial judge and dismissed the appeal. The acquittal
of Ratti Ram was challenged by the State but the State’s
appeal was dismissed and Ratti Ram’s acquittal was
confirmed. The appellants have come to this Court by
special leave and on their behalf, Mr. Bhasin has contended
that the High Court was in error in confirming the order of
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conviction and sentence passed against the 3 appellants by
the trial judge.
The facts leading to the prosecution of the appellants lie
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within a very narrow compass. It appears that on June 2,
1960, before sun-rise the victim Inder Singh was returning
towards his house after relieving himself of the call of
nature. When he came near the Baithak of Krishan Lal Jat,
he was suddenly attacked by the three appellants. Darya
Singh had -a lathi and Rasala and Pehlada had a gandasa
each. The prosecution had alleged that Ratti Ram had also
joined in that act. All the assailants inflicted serious
injuries on Inder Singh as a result of which he died. While
he was being assaulted, Inder Singh raised an alarm in
consequence of which his brother Dalip Singh, his wife
Dharam Devi and his son Shamsher Singh rushed to the scene
of the offence. They, however, had not the courage to go to
the rescue of the victim, because they were afraid that they
would themselves be assaulted. At the time of the assault,
Darya Singh fired shots in the air to frighten people.
After the assailants left the scene of the offence, Dalip
Singh, Dharam Devi and Shamsher Singh went near the victim,
but found that he was dead. First Information Report about
this occurrence was then sent and that set the investigation
into motion, as a result of which the three appellants and
their brother Ratti Ram were arrested and put up for trial
for offence under section 302/34 I. P. C.
The case of the prosecution rests on the evidence of three
eye-witnesses, Dalip Sing (P. W. 2), Shamsher Singh (P. W.
3) who is a student of the Engineering College, Ludhiana,
and, Dharam Devi (P. W. 4). These three witnesses gave a
consistent account of the attack on Inder Singh which they
witnessed in front of their house and stated how each one of
the three appellants took part in the assault.
401
Mira Singh (P.W.5) who is Lambardar of the village reached
the scene of the offence, after the victim had been
murdered. When he reached the scene of the offence, he was
told by Shamsher Singh about the assault and was also given
the Dames of the assailants. The learned trial judge
believed the three eye-witnesses, but was not inclined to
act upon the evidence of Hira Singh. The High Court has
believed the three eye-witnesses as well as the evidence of
Hira Singh. The High Court thought that the failure of
Dalip Singh to refer to the arrival of Hira Singh in the
first information report did not introduce any infirmity in
the evidence of Hira Singh himself, and it has observed that
Hira Singh’s presence on the scene soon after the occurrence
is established by the fact that he has signed the inquest
report which was prepared by the Assistant SubInspector
Gurbux Singh on reaching the scene of the offence at about 9
A. M. In considering the evidence of these witnesses, the
High Court took into account the fact that some
inconsistencies were brought to its notice, but it held that
they did not constitute any serious infirmity in the
evidence at all. It is true that the prosecution had also
relied upon the evidence of certain recoveries made by the
investigating officer, but neither the Sessions judge nor
the High Court has attached any importance to the said
recoveries or the disclosure statements preceding them.
Since the High Court took the view that the oral evidence
adduced by the prosecution established the guilt of the
appellants beyond a reasonable doubt, it has confirmed their
conviction under s. 302134 and the sentence of life
imprisonment imposed on them by the trial Court.
It appears that the murder of Inder Singh was an act of
repraisal on the part of the appellants, because it is not
denied that Dewan Singh- -another brother of the appellants,
had been killed in April, 1957, and Dhup Singh,, the step-
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brother of Inder
402
Singh had been found guilty of the said murder. The
sentence of life imprisonment imposed on him by the Trial
Court had been confirmed by the High Court on January 14,
1959, but on the recommendation made by the High Court, the
said sentence had been commuted to five years by the State
Government. There is evidence to show that Inder Singh
moved the State Government of Punjab for the release of Dhup
Singh on two months’ parole, and this he did by an
application on April 5,,1960. It appears that this
application had been subsequently rejected by the State
Government on July 15, 1960; but on June 2, 1960 when Inder
Singh was assaulted, the said application was pending and
the appellants were, indignant that Inder Singh should have
moved the State Government for the release of his step-
brother Dhup Singh. That, according to the prosecution, is
the motive for the commission of the offence. Both the
Courts below have agreed that this motive must have led to
the commission of the offence.
Mr. Bhasin contends that the High Court was in error in
accepting the evidence of the three eyewitnesses, because
the said evidence has been given by witnesses, who are near
relatives of Inder Singh and who shared Inder Singh’s enmity
against the appellants. In such a case, the High Court
could not have acted upon the said interested and hostile
evidence without corroboration. Mr. Bhasin realised that if
he were to contend that the High Court should not have
accepted the said evidence on the merits, that would be a
matter of appreciation of oral evidence and the conclusion
of the High Court based on the appreciation of oral evidence
cannot ordinarily be challenged in an appeal under Art. 136.
He, therefore, put his case higher and contended that in law
the evidence of interested and hostile witnesses cannot be
accepted without corroboration, and he suggests that some of
the decisions of this Court lend support to his argument.
403
There can be no doubt that in a murder case when evidence is
given by near relatives of the victim and the murder is
alleged to have been committed by the enemy of the family,
criminal Courts must examine the evidence of the interested
witnesses, like the relatives of the victim, very carefully.
But a person may be interested in the victim, being his
relation or otherwise, and may not necessarily be hostile to
the accused. In that case, the fact that the witness was
related to the victim or was his friend, may not necessarily
introduce any infirmity in his evidence. But where the
witness is a close relation of the victim and is shown to
share the victim’s hostility to his assailant, that
naturally makes it necessary for the criminal Court to
examine the evidence given by such witness very carefully
and scrutinise all the infirmities in that evidence before
deciding to act upon it. In dealing with such evidence,
Courts naturally begin with the enquiry as to whether the
said witnesses were chancewitnesses or whether they were
really present on the scene of the offence. If the offence
has taken place as in the present case, in front of the
house of the victim, the fact that on hearing his shouts;
his relations rushed out of the house cannot be ruled out as
being improbable, and so, the presence of the three eye-
witnesses cannot be properly characterised as unlikely. If
the criminal Court is satisfied that the witness who is
related to the victim was not a chance-witness, then his
evidence has to be examined from the point of view of
probabilities and the account given by him as to the assault
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has to be carefully scrutinised. In doing so, it may be
relevant to remember that though the witness is hostile to
the assailant, it is not likely that he would deliberately
omit to name the real assailant and substitute in his place
the name of enemy of the family out of malice. The desire
to punish the victim would be so powerful in his mind that
he would unhesitatingly name the real assailant and would
not think of
404
substituting in his place the enemy of the family though he
was not concerned with the assault. It is not improbable
that in giving evidence, such a witness may name the real
assailant and may add other persons out of malice and enmity
and that is a factor which has to be borne in mind in
appreciating the evidence of interested witnesses. On
principle, however, it is difficult to accept the plea that
if a witness is shown to be a relative of the deceased and
it is also shown that he shared the hostility of the victim
towards the assailant, his evidence can never be accepted
unless it is corroborated on material particulars. We do
not think it would be possible to hold that such witnesses
are no better than accomplices and that their evidence, as a
matter of law, must receive corroboration before it is
accepted. That is not to say that the evidence of such
witnesses should be accepted lightheartedly without very
close and careful examination, and so, we cannot accept Mr.
Bhasin’s argument that the High Court committee an error of
law in accepting the evidence of the three eye-witnesses
without corroboration.
It now remains to consider Mr. Bhasin’s contention that some
of the decisions of this Court support the proposition that
as a matter of law, corroboration must be available before
interested evidence of the relatives of the victim can be
accepted. The first decision on which Mr Bhasin has relied
is the case of Rameshwar v. The State of Rajasthan (1). In
that case, the accused was charged with having committed an
offence under s.376 I.P.C. and the point which was raised
for the decision of this Court was in regard to the
appreciation of the evidence of a prosecutrix in a -sex
offence. In that connection, this Court held that though a
woman who has been raped is not an accomplices her evidence
has been treated by the Courts on somewhat similar lines,
and tile rule which
(1) [1952] S C. R. 377.
405
requires corroboration of such evidence save in exceptional
circumstances, has now hardened into law. It is obvious
that this decision can have no application to the facts in
the present case. It is well settled that in cases of rape,
prudence require, that evidence given by the prosecutrix
should be corroborated, though even in these cases, it would
be open to a Court of law to act upon the evidence of the
prosecutrix if her evidence appears to the Court to be
completely satisfactory and there are attending
circumstances which make it safe for the Court to act upon
that evidence without corroboration. But cases of rape
cannot, in the context, be compared to cases of murder, and
so, no assistance can be legitimately drawn by Mr. Bhasin
from this decision in contending that in a murder case, if a
relative of the victim gives evidence, his evidence cannot,
in law, be acted upon unless it is corroborated.
The next decision to which Mr. Bhasin has referred is the
decision of this Court in Lachman Singh v. The State (1).
It appears that in that case, the High Court had taken the
view that "in all the circumstances it would be proper not
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to rely upon the oral evidence implicating particular
accused unless there is some circumstantial evidence to
support it", and the High Court proceeded to examine the
evidence from this point of view, and upheld the conviction
of three persons who had come to this Court in appeal under
Art. 136. The contention of the appellants that their
conviction was not justified, however, failed a.-id their
appeal was dismissed. Mr. Bhasin suggests that in dealing
with the evidence, this Court had impliedly approved of the
approach adopted by the High Court in appreciating the evi-
dence of interested testimony in a murder trial. It cannot
be disputed that if the evidence given by interested
witnesses in a murder trial seems to suffer from some
infirmities, the Court would be justified in looking for
some corroboration before accepting
(1) [1952] S.C.R 839,844
406
the said evidence. Cases may arise where such interested
evidence may be shown to have implicated some persons
without any justification, or cases may arise where the
evidence given by eye-witnesses, who are interested,
conflicts in material particulars, or may appear to be
improbable; in all these cases, the Court would naturally be
justified in refusing to act upon such evidence without
corroboration. That is a precaution which is invariably
adopted by criminal Courts in dealing with all direct
evidence, and so, the fact that in the circumstances of any
particular case, the High Court required some corroboration
before acting upon direct evidence and this Court approved
of the said approach, does not lend support to the general
proposition of law for which Mr. Bhasin contends that in all
cases where interested witnesses give evidence in a murder
trial, their evidence cannot be accepted as a matter of law
without corroboration.
In Karnail Singh v. The State of Punjab (I), the High Court
from whose decision an appeal was brought to this Court, had
adopted a similar approach. Having regard to the
circumstances of the case, the High Court had taken the view
that the evidence given by the sole witness Karnail Singh
could not be safely acted upon unless there was some
corroboration, and in dealing with this approach, this Court
took the precaution of repeating what it had already stated
in the case of Lachman Singh (2), that the corroboration
that is required in such cases is not what would be
necessary to support the evidence of an approver, but what
would be sufficient to lend assurance to the evidence before
them, and satisfy them that the particular persons were
really concerned in the murder of the deceased.
The same view has been expressed by this Court in the case
of Vaikuntam Chandrappa v. The State of Andhra Pradesh (3).
Therefore, the broad and unqualified proposition for which
Mr. Bhasin
(1) [1954] S.C.R. 904. (2) [1952) S.C.R,839,844.
(3) A. I R. 1960. S. C. 1340
407
contends is not supported by any of the decisions on which
he relied. We have no doubt that the rule of caution which
requires corroboration to evidence of interested witnesses
cannot be treated as an inflexible principle which can be
mechinically applied to all cases, because in that event if
a murder is committed in the house of the victim-, it would
be difficult to convict the assailant, for in such a case
all the witnesses would be relatives of the victim. That is
why in appreciating evidence of this kind, Courts have, no
doubt, to be careful but they cannot be bound by any
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inflexible rule like the one suggested by Mr. Bhasin.
Mr. Bhasin further argued that the murder having taken place
in a locality where a large number of citizens resided, it
was the duty of the prosecution to have examined independent
persons staying in the locality to support its case against
the appellants and he suggested that if the prosecution
failed to examine such witnesses, it was the duty of the
Court to have exercised its powers under s. 540 of the
Criminal Procedure Code and to call such witnesses to give
evidence. Mr. Bhasin argues that under s. 172 of the Code,
it is competent to a Criminal Court to send for the police
diaries of a case under trial in such Court and if the Court
had seen the police diaries, it would have easily found
whether -the statements of any independent eye-witnesses had
been recorded or not If it found that some statements of
independent eye-witnesses bad been recorded. it should have
called them in exercise of its powers under s. 540 of the
Code; since this has not been done, it has introduced an
infirmity in the trial, and this Court should set aside the
conviction of the appellants and send the case back with a
direction that the Magistrate should exercise his powers
under s. 540 as suggested by Mr. Bhasin. In our opinion,
this argument is entirely misconceived. It is well settled
that in a murder case, it is primarily for the prosecutor to
408
decide which witnesses he should examine in order to unfold
his story. It is obvious that a prosecutor must act fairly
and honestly and must never adopt the device of keeping back
from the Court eye-witnesses only because their evidence is
likely to go against the prosecution case. The duty of the
prosecutor is to assist the Court in reaching a proper
conclusion in regard to the case which is brought before it
for trial. It is no doubt open to the prosecutor not to
examine witnesses who, in his opinion, have not witnessed
the incident, but, normally he ought to examine all the eye-
witnesses in support of his case. It may be that if a large
number of persons have witnessed the incident, it would be
open to the prosecutor to make a selection of those
witnesses, but the selection must be made fairly and
honestly and not with a view to suppress inconvenient
witnesses from the witness-box. If at the trial it is shown
that persons who had witnessed the incident have been
deliberately kept back, the Court may draw an inference
against the prosecution and may, in a proper case, regard
the failure of the prosecutor to examine the said witnesses
as constituting a serious infirmity in the proof of the
prosecution case. In such a case, if the ends of justice
require, the Court may even examine such witnesses by
exercising its powers under s. 540; but to say that in every
murder case, the Court must scrutinise the. police diary and
make a list of witnesses whom the prosecutor must examine,
is virtually to suggest that the Court should itself take
the role of a prosecutor. The powers of the Court under s.
540 can and ought to be exercised in the interests of
justice whenever the Court feels that the interests of
justice so require, but that does not justify Mr. Bhasin’s
contention that the failure of the Court to have exercised
its powers under s, 540 has introduced a serious infirmity
in the trial itself.
In this connection, it is necessary to bear in mind that
there is nothing on the record to show
409
that any person in the locality who actually witnessed the
incident had been kept back. No such suggestion has been
made to the investigating officer and no other evidence has
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been brought by the defence in support of such a plea. It
is well-known that in villages where murders are committed
as a result of factions existing in the village or in
consequence of family feuds, independent villagers arc
generally reluctant to give evidence because they are afraid
that giving evidence might invite the wrath of the
assailants and might expose them to very serious risks. It
is quite true that it is the duty of a citizen to assist the
prosecution by giving evidence and helping the
administration of criminal law to bring the offender to
book, but it would be wholly unrealistic to suggest that if
the prosecution is not able to bring independent witnesses
to the Court because they are afraid to give evidence, that
itself should be treated as an infirmity in the prosecution
case so as to justify the defence contention that the
evidence actually adduced should be disbelieved on that
ground alone without examining its merits. In the present
case, we see no justification for the assumption that any
eyewitness has been kept back from the Court, and so, we
feel no hesitation in rejecting the argument that the case
should be sent back on the hypothetical ground that the
scrutiny of the police diary may disclose the presence of an
independent eye-witness such an argument is wholly
misconceived and can be characterised as fantastic.
As we have already indicated, both the Courts below have
examined the evidence given by the eyewitnesses and have
believed the said evidence. The High Court has also
believed the evidence of Hira Singh, the Lambardar. The
story deposed to by these witnesses appears to be very
probable Tie and has been treated by the Courts below as
consistent and cogent. In such circumstances, it is not
open to the appellants to contend that this Court should
410
reappreciate the said evidence and decide whether the view
taken by the High Court is right or not. In our opinion,
the conviction of the appellants rests on the appreciation
of oral evidence and no case has been made out for our
interference under Art. 136 of the Constitution.
The result is, the appeal fails and is dismissed.