Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 707 of 2000
PETITIONER:
SEWAKA @ RAMSEWAK
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF M.P. & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 31/10/2001
BENCH:
R.C. Lahoti & P. Venkatarama Reddi
JUDGMENT:
R.C. Lahoti, J.
Sewaka @ Ramsewak, the appellant was tried on charges under
Section 302 IPC and Section 25 of the Arms Act. His real brother and
co-accused Rakesh was tried on a charge under Section 302 read with
Section 34 IPC. The Trial Court acquitted both the accused persons.
Feeling aggrieved by the acquittal, the State of Madhya Pradesh
preferred an appeal before the High Court. The Division Bench of the
High Court, which heard the appeal, has allowed the same. The
appellant and the co-accused, who were respondents before the High
Court have been held guilty of the offences charged and sentenced to
life imprisonment each. Rakesh has not preferred any appeal and in
so far as he is concerned the matter has achieved a finality. The
legality of the conviction and the sentence passed thereon, in so far as
the appellant is concerned, are in issue in this appeal.
It is an undisputed fact that some time before the present
occurrence the deceased Kitab Singh had appeared as a witness
against the accused persons in a trial wherein the accused persons
were charged for the offence of murder. The Trial Court convicted
the accused persons but they were acquitted by the High Court. Since
then there was a feeling of enmity entertained by the accused persons
against Kitab Singh though the version of the accused is that they
have been falsely implicated on account of that enmity. On the night
intervening 6th and 7th July, 1983, the deceased Kitab Singh was
sleeping on a cot in the courtyard of his house. In the same courtyard
his wife Gangashri (PW1) was sleeping. A little later after the
midnight Gangashri got up to ease herself and having returned she
was lying on the cot when she heard voice of Rakesh saying that the
enemy was there and he should be shot at. Sewak @ Ramsewak, the
appellant, fired a shot with a katta (i.e. a countrymade pistol) and the
shot hit on the head of the deceased. Gangashri got up and grappled
with the accused persons. It was a moon-lit night and the accused
persons being residents of the same village, well-known to the witness
since before, were identified by her. While grappling, the cap of the
appellant came in the hands of the witness but the two accused
persons escaped and ran away. Her hue and cry attracted her father-
in-law, Ram Sanehi who was sleeping at a little distance but in the
same house as also Subedar Singh, cousin brother of Gangashri who
had come to the village on a visit the previous day. Gangashri told
Ram Sanehi and Subedar that they were the two accused persons of
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whom Rakesh had exhorted and Sewaka had shot from katta which
had fatally hit her husband, Kitab Singh. FIR of the incident was
lodged by Karan Singh, brother of the deceased at 9.45 a.m. on 7th
July, 1983 at P.S. Surpura situated at a distance of 10 kms. from
village Rama. The dead body of Kitab Singh was sent for post-
mortem. The deceased was found to have sustained a gun shot wound
of 1½ x 1/5 dimension at the junction of parietal and occipital bones.
The edges of the wound were inverted, margins were clean cut and
brain matter along with blood was leaking out of the wound. There
was no wound of exit present. On internal examination, a bullet 1 in
length and ¼ in diameter was found embedded in the fractured bones
of the base of skull which was recovered, sealed and handed over to
the police. In the opinion of the doctor the cause of death was coma
resulting from injury to brain. The injury was ante-mortem and
sufficient in the ordinary course of nature to cause death.
The prosecution case hinges upon the single testimony of
Gangashri. We have, with the help of learned counsel for the
appellant, gone through the statement of Gangashri (PW1) as also
other evidence available on record. We have carefully perused the
judgment of the Trial Court as also of the High Court especially the
reasons assigned by the Trial Court for disbelieving the statement of
Gangashri and the reasons for reversal of acquittal recorded by the
High Court. Without delving deeper into the reasons and cataloguing
the same from the judgment of the Trial Court it would suffice for us
to observe that the reasons contained in the judgment of the Trial
Court for disbelieving the testimony of Gangashri are most flimsy and
illogical, to say the least. The High Court was therefore fully justified
in re-appreciating and re-assessing the worth of the evidence of
Gangashri in an attempt to evaluate if her testimony was of sterling
character on which the conviction could be safely based.
We have independently for ourselves carefully scrutinized the
evidence of Gangashri. She is a natural witness. It is not disputed,
nor could it have been, that the place of the occurrence is the
courtyard of deceased Kitab Singh. It was the beginning of the month
of July. In the part of the country where the village of occurrence is
situated, in early July, the summer is at its height and arrival of
monsoon is awaited. The weather is sultry. Usually people in the
villages sleep in verandahs or courtyards to avail open air and if at all
there are any casual showers they can easily move to a covered place
so as to save themselves from rain water. Gangashri being the wife of
the deceased was sleeping on a cot in the same part of the house
where her husband was sleeping, and there is nothing unnatural about
it. After the mid-night her getting awake for easing herself and then
returning to her cot also appears to be natural and in any case there is
nothing unusual or unbelievable about it. She heard some voice and
became alert and soon she saw her husband being fatally shot at. She
got up and grappled with the assailants but the assailants made good
their escape. Her cry attracted her father-in-law and cousin brother
who were sleeping at a short distance and immediately she told her
father-in-law the names of the assailants and the gist of what had
happened. It is not disputed that it was a moon-lit night. The learned
counsel submitted, by reference to almanac that moon would have set
at about 2 to 3 AM and therefore at the time of occurrence moon-light
might not have been there. This submission cuts too fine. Gangashri
is a rustic woman. She was not wearing a wrist watch. The time of
occrrence given by her is an estimated one. But she is very sure of
moon light existing then. Her having identified the assailants cannot
be doubted.
A murder having taken place in the house no body would risk
moving 10 kms. away in the dead of night to lodge FIR of the
incident. Early morning Karan Singh left for the police station and
lodged the FIR at about 9.45 a.m. The testimony of Gangashri finds
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support from the testimony of Ram Sanehi, PW3, Karan Singh, PW2
and corroboration from the promptly lodged FIR. Baij Nath, PW4, an
uncle of the deceased Kitab Singh, who also reached soon after the
occurrence corroborates the statements of Gangashri and Ram Sanehi.
The narration of the incident by Gangashri is most natural. Her
testimony has remained unshaken though subjected to lengthy cross-
examination. We find no reason to disbelieve her.
The learned counsel for the appellant submitted that in the
month of July the villagers do not sleep in open and therefore it is
doubtful if Gangashri (PW1) was sleeping in the courtyard. He also
submitted that Gangashri could not have been awoke when the
occurrence took place and therefore she could not have identified the
accused persons. He also submitted that if she had heard the voice of
Rakesh exhorting Sewaka to kill the enemy then she should have
immediately awoken her husband and her having not done so makes
her conduct unnatural. All these submissions have been noted only to
be rejected. The fact that Kitab Singh was murdered while sleeping
on a cot in the courtyard cannot be doubted as there is overwhelming
evidence available in that regard. If Kitab Singh was sleeping in the
courtyard there is nothing unnatural about Gangashri also sleeping on
a cot in the courtyard. Rising from the sleep at about or after mid-
night for easing oneself during summer when people consume enough
water is also very natural. The voice she heard was here is enemy,
shoot him. Rakesh had not named the deceased in his exhortation.
By the time Gangashri could understand what the exhortation meant
and what was going to happen, the appellant had fired from the katta.
The witness sprang up from her cot and grappled with the assailants.
The conduct of the witness is most natural and the criticism levelled
on the conduct of the witness is unwarranted. In our opinion, the
High Court was fully justified in holding Gangashri a natural witness
and a witness of truth and we too, on our own independent evaluation
of her testimony, find ourselves in agreement with the opinion of the
High Court.
It is true that Gangashri, Ram Sanehi, Karan Singh and Baij
Nath are all relations of the deceased, but then in the fact- situation of
the case they are the likely and natural witnesses of the facts stated by
them. We see no reason why the relations of the deceased would
implicate the accused appellant falsely. So far as the enmity is
concerned, the cause for enmity is such that it may provide motive for
the accused to assault the deceased but we are not persuaded to hold
that it can provide motive to Gangashri for falsely implicating the
accused persons.
The two accused persons were arrested on 28.8.1983, more than
1½ months after the date of the occurrence. At the time of arrest a
katta is said to have been recovered which was tied on the waist of the
appellant. This katta was sent to the ballistic expert along with the
pellet recovered from the dead body of Kitab Singh. The ballistic
expert opined that the pellet was fired from this katta. However, we
are not inclined to believe the recovery of katta from the possession of
the appellant. According to D.S. Rana, PW12, Sub-Inspector of
Police and investigating officer, at about 10.30 a.m. acting on a secret
information he apprehended the accused persons on the outskirts of
the village. Attar Singh, PW6, who is nephew of the deceased and
also a panch witness attesting to the arrest memo of accused and
seizure memo of katta from the possession of the accused appellant,
states the time of arrest and recovery to be 4 p.m. According to him
the accused were chased and then arrested. It appears to us to be
unnatural that more than 1½ months from the date of the commission
of the offence the accused appellant would be arrested on the outskirts
of the village armed with the katta. Defence evidence has been
adduced on behalf of the accused appellant to the effect that the story
of the accused persons having been apprehended on the outskirts of
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the village, as deposed to by the investigating officer, is not correct.
In fact, they were pressurized into surrendering before the
Superintendent of Police, and they did so, but falsely their arrest has
been shown in the manner as deposed to by the investigating officer
and Attar Singh. Be that as it may, in view of apparent and
irreconcilable contradiction between the testimony of investigating
officer and Attar Singh we are not inclined to believe that the
appellant was arrested and the seized katta recovered from his
possession in the manner as alleged by the prosecution. However,
disbelieving the recovery of katta does not cause any dent in the
prosecution case which, we find agreeing with the High Court, is
amply made out from the testimony of eye-witness Gangashri
corroborated by other evidence as stated hereinabove.
For the foregoing reasons, we do not find any fault with the
conviction recorded under section 302 IPC and the sentence passed
thereon by the High Court in so far as the accused appellant is
concerned. As we have disbelieved the recovery of katta from the
appellant, his conviction under section 25 Arms Act is set aside.
Subject to this modification, the appeal is dismissed.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .J.
( R.C. LAHOTI )
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .J.
( P. VENKATARAMA REDDI )
October 31, 2001