Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 639 of 2007
PETITIONER:
Raj Pal and another
RESPONDENT:
State of Haryana
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 27/04/2007
BENCH:
S.B. Sinha & Markandey Katju
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
CRIMINAL APPEAL NO. 639 OF 2007
(Arising out of SLP(Crl) No.4988 of 2006 )
MARKANDEY KATJU, J.
1. This appeal has been filed against the impugned judgment dated
8.12.2005 passed by the Punjab & Haryana High Court in Criminal Appeal
No. 67-DB/1997.
2. Heard learned counsel for the parties and perused the record.
3. The prosecution case is that Raj Pal and Jai Pal appellants are brothers
inter-se, being sons of Hari Chand. A panchayat was held in the village, in
the month of February 1990, in connection with the theft of buffaloes of Yad
Ram. Hira Lal complainant, Karan Singh, and Kure Ram had also attended
the Panchayat, in which Sohan Lal (@ Melha) deceased, who was uncle of
Yad Ram, had suspected the appellants to be the thieves. It is alleged that
since then the appellants had been nourishing a grudge against Sohan Lal.
4. On 5.8.1990, Hira Lal complainant, PW 10 Zile Singh and one Diwan
Singh were smoking "huqqa", in front of the baithak of Shadi Lal. At about
1.00 p.m. Sohan Lal was returning to his house after grazing buffaloes in his
fields. When he reached in front of Parshadi’s house, Jai Pal and Raj Pal
appellants who were armed with pharsi and lathi respectively came near him
and said that they would teach him a lesson for suspecting them as the
thieves of buffaloes. Jai Pal then gave a pharsi blow and Raj Pal gave a
lathi blow on Sohan Lal’s head. He fell on the ground. Even in fallen
condition, Raj Pal gave 2-3 more lathi blows which hit him on his back.
Seeing this, Hira Lal (PW 9), Zile Singh (PW 10), and Diwan Singh reached
the spot and rescued Sohan Lal from the clutches of appellants. In the
rescuing process, Jai Pal also received injuries. The appellants, thereafter,
fled away from the spot with their respective weapons. Zile Singh and
Surender son of Hans Lal removed Sohan Lal (injured) from the spot, in a
car, to the General Hospital, Gurgaon, where he succumbed to his injuries.
On receipt of this information, in the form of medical ruqqa, Ex. PA, about
the death of Sohan Lal, Sub-Inspector Suraj Bhan reached the hospital,
where Hira Lal complainant and Bis Ram were found sitting near the dead-
body of Sohan Lal. He recorded the statement of Hira Lal, Ex. PH, and sent
it to the police station with his endorsement, Ex.PH/1, thereon, on which the
case against the appellants was registered vide formal FIR, Ex PH/2. He
prepared inquest report, Ex. PL, and sent the dead-body for post-mortem
examination. He visited the place of occurrence, prepared rough site plan
thereof, Ex. PM, and also called the photographer who took photographs,
Exs. P3 and P4 (negatives Exs. P1 and P2) , of the scene of occurrence. He
also took into possession blood-stained earth from there vide memo, Ex. PN,
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after making it into a sealed parcel. He searched for the appellants but could
arrest them only on 10.8.1990, as earlier they remained absconding. On
12.8.1990, Raj Pal appellant got a lathi recovered in pursuance of his
disclosure statement. Ex. PO, and the same was taken into possession vide
memo, Ex.PO/1. Similarly, Jai Pal appellant also got recovered a ’pharsi’ in
pursuance of his disclosure statement, Ex. PP, and the same too, was taken
into possession vide memo, Ex. PP/1.
5. After completion of investigation, challan was filed in court against
the appellants by Inspector Jag Parvesh PW5.
6. On receipt of the case, by way of commitment, the trial court charged
the appellants under Section 302 read with Section 34 I.P.C. and since they
pleaded not guilty, the case was committed for trial.
7. The witnesses examined by the prosecution, in support of their case,
are PW 1 Dr. B.M. Bhatnagar, PW 2 Dr. Sushil Goyal, PW 3 Mool Chand
Punia, PW 4 Balwant Rai Bhatia, PW 5 Inspector Jag Parvesh, PW 6
Constable Maheshswar, PW 7 Jai Singh, PW 8 Head Constable Murari Lal,
PW 9 Hira Lal, PW 10 Zile Singh and PW 11 Sub-Inspector Suraj Bhan.
8. After consideration of the evidence on record the trial court by its
judgment dated 7.12.1996 found the appellant Raj Pal and Jai Pal
guilty of offence under Section 302 read with Section 34 I.P.C and
sentenced them to life imprisonment.
9. Against the said judgment the accused filed an appeal before the High
Court which was dismissed by the impugned judgment, and hence this
appeal.
10. We have carefully perused the evidence and material on record and
we are of the opinion that the benefit of doubt has to be given to the accused.
11. In this connection it may be mentioned that in the FIR dated 5.8.1990
it has been stated that the accused Jai Pal gave a pharsi blow on the head of
Sohan Lal while Rajpal gave a lathi blow on his head. The same is the
statements in Court of the alleged eye witnesses PW 9 Hira Lal and PW 10
Zile Singh. A pharsi is a weapon which causes an incised wound like an
axe. However, there is no incised wound on the body of Sohan Lal as is
evident from the post mortem report. There are four injuries on the dead
body of Sohan Lal as found by Dr. Sushil Goyal’s post mortem report
conducted on 5.8.1990 at 6.05 p.m. One of these wounds was a lacerated
wound on the head while the other wounds are contusions on the shoulder.
There is no incised wound. Thus, there is a clear inconsistency between the
ocular version and the medical version.
12. The prosecution version is that the pharsi was used lathi wise by its
blunt edge. It seems to us that this appears to be a tutored version when the
prosecution realized that there was a clear inconsistency between the ocular
version and the medical version. In fact in his statement in Court PW 9 Hira
Lal stated that he did not state to the police in his statement under Section
161 Cr.PC that the pharsi blow was given lathi wise. Thus, his statement in
the court appears to be a clear improvement over the statement given to the
police. As regards the other witness PW 10 Zile Singh, he has not stated in
his evidence that the pharsi blow was given to Sohan Lal lathi wise.
13. Another contradiction between the ocular version and the medical
version is that according to the FIR version and deposition of the eye
witnesses before the trial court two blows were given on the head of Sohan
Lal, a pharsi blow by Jai Pal and a lathi blow by Raj Pal. However, in the
post mortem report only one injury (lacerated wound) was found on the head
of Sohan Lal.
14. In their statements under Section 313 Cr.PC the accused Jai Pal and
Raj Pal accepted that they did attack Sohan Lal but said that they did so in
their self-defence. In these statements the accused pleaded innocence and
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false implication by the witnesses. They stated that a wrestling bout had
taken place in their village on the occasion of Raksha Bandhan in the year
1989. Wrestlers of Rohtak and Bandhwari had opposed each other, at that
time Hansraj Sarpanch was married in the village Bandhwari and he had
sided with the wrestlers of that village whereas in fact they were not
winning. Rajpal used to organize that wresting bout with the help of
villagers, and at that time, he, Hira Lal, Diwan Singh, Zile Singh and Karan
Singh had a wordy duel. Raj Pal was telling that wrestlers of Rohtak had
won whereas they were opposing them and on that account they have been
falsely implicated in this case. Aforesaid Hans Raj, Diwan Singh, Hira Lal,
Zile Singh and Karan Singh belong to different parties. Ram Chand is also
stated to be their companion and was always opposed to them.
15. Jai Pal accused further elaborated in his 313 Cr.PC statement that
Ram Chander had forcibly opened a door towards his plot. He opposed it,
and hence they quarreled on that issue also. Ram Chander, Sohan Lal,
Karan Singh came there with lathis and opened attack on him. He ran away
but they overpowered him near the house of Parshadi. He then picked up a
three pronged jelly from that place and used it in self-defence. A blow of his
jelly hit the back of Sohan Lal. He fell down. A brick was lying on the
ground. The peg for tethering cattle (Khunta) was also in existence at that
place. Since Sohan Lal fell down he got a chance and escaped therefrom.
The police arrested him, his brother and his father on the evening of 5th of
August 1990. He narrated the incident to the police. Despite that, the police
implicated him falsely. He had sufficient injuries in this accident but the
police did not arrange for his Medico Legal Report till 10th of August 1990.
The police even did not produce them in the Court. Only on the application
moved by his brother Shiv Raj, they were produced in the Court. The entire
prosecution case is false and concocted. If one is sitting on the chabutra of
Shadi Lal, then the house of Parshadi Lal was not visible and this proves that
Raj Pal, and his brother were not present, at all, at the time of the aforesaid
incident.
16. In their defence evidence the accused examined DW-1 Dr. S.P. Singh.
He stated that on 18.8.1990 at about 8.00 p.m. he medically examined Jai
Pal and found the following injuries on his person :-
(1) Already dissected and stitched wound, over
the left parietal eminence, length 1-1/4".
(2) Complaint of pain back. No mark of
external injury was seen. There was no
swelling.
(3) Complaint of pain left calf, muscles. There
was no mark of external injury. There was
no swelling.
Learned counsel for the appellant has submitted that Jai Pal, the appellant
has honestly admitted that he caused the injury on the back of the deceased
with a jelly and his brother Raj Pal was not present. He submitted that the
injuries on the person of Jai Pal was in self-defence. He further submitted
that the report of the local commissioner clearly reveals that it was not
possible for the eye witnesses Hira Lal and Zile Singh to have seen the
occurrence while sitting at the place in front of Shadi Lal’s Baithak as the
place of occurrence, that is the house of Prashadi Lal, is not visible from
there. He further submitted that there is a clear contradiction between eye
the witnesses and the medical evidence (details of which have already been
mentioned above). The delay in lodging the FIR also shows that it is a
concocted false story. The injuries on the person of Jai Pal are totally
unexplained by the prosecution and they are in conformity with the defence
version.
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17. Learned counsel further stated that the motive attributed to the
accused was stale and the theft of buffalo of Yad Ram and Sohan Lal was
only a the suspicion which had taken place a long time back and was no
reason to commit a serious crime as murder. Learned counsel further
submitted that the FIR is the result of consultation and deliberation. The
special report was received by the Illaqa Magistrate at 6.55 p.m. even though
his residence is only 100 yards from the police station.
18. We are of the opinion that in this case the benefit of doubt has to be
given to the accused and it is possible that it is a case of bona fide self-
defence.
19. In Bishna vs. State of West Bengal (2005) 12 SCC 657 one of us
(Hon. S.B. Sinha, J) have discussed in great detail the law of private defence
and the effect of non-explanation by the prosecution of the injuries on the
accused.
20. While there is no absolute rule that merely because the prosecution
has failed to explain the injuries on the accused ipso facto the prosecution
case should be thrown out, the non-explanation of the injuries on the accused
is certainly an important circumstance which has to be taken into
consideration by the Court in deciding whether the benefit of doubt should
go to the accused. In Bishna’s case (supra) the entire law on the point has
been discussed in great detail, and hence it is unnecessary to repeat it here.
21. The injuries on the accused include an injury on the head, which is a
vital part of the body. Ordinarily self-inflicted injuries are on non-vital
parts. The injury on the head of the accused Jai Pal required stitches. It is
difficult to believe that this was self-inflicted. Moreover, in the present case,
as noticed above, there are very important discrepancies in the prosecution
version. It is true that minor discrepancies will not necessarily lead to the
rejection of the prosecution case, but when there are major discrepancies and
unexplained injuries on the accused it is an important factor to be taken into
account.
22. In his statement under Section 313 Cr.PC, Jai Pal has stated that Ram
Chander had forcibly opened a door towards his plot. Since Jai Pal opposed
this there was a quarrel on this issue. Thereupon Ram Chander, Sohan Lal
and Karan Singh attacked Jai Pal and he tried to run away, but they
overpowered him near the house of Parshadi where he picked up a jelly and
used it in his self-defence.
23. While we are not in a position to say that the version of Jai Pal is
necessarily correct, it certainly throws a reasonable doubt upon the entire
prosecution version when it is coupled with other circumstances (such as
major discrepancies between the ocular version and the medical evidence)
which have already been referred to above.
24. In view of the above discussion, we are of the opinion that the benefit
of doubt has to be given to the appellants. The appeal is allowed. The
impugned judgments of the trial court and the High Court are set aside. The
appellants shall be released forthwith unless required in some other case.