Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 195 of 2001
Appeal (crl.) 196 of 2001
PETITIONER:
SHANKAR MAHTO & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
VS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 31/07/2002
BENCH:
SHIVARAJ V. PATIL, B.N.AGRAWAL.
JUDGMENT:
B.N.AGRAWAL, J.
In these two appeals by special leave, the appellants have assailed their
convictions and sentences awarded by the trial court and upheld by the Patna
High Court.
The short facts are that on 28th February, 1991 at about 8.00 p.m., when
the informant Liro Kumari- (PW.6) along with her father Doman Mahto, mother
Shibo Devi, sister Shakho Devi and children of her family was sitting near fire at
the outer door of her house, all of a sudden, all the appellants along with
accused Shrilal Sharma, Haro Sharma, Ram Bilash Mahto, Ram Udgar Sharma
and 3-4 others armed with farsas and lathis came to the house and seeing them
she and her family members out of fear ran to the courtyard of the house. The
appellants and their companions following them entered the courtyard. Accused
Shrilal Sharma and Haro Sharma, both of whom were armed with farsas and co-
accused Ram Bilash Mahto, who was armed with lathi, caught hold of Doman
Mahto, father of the informant, and took him to outer door of the house.
Appellants Harilal Mahto and Jharilal Mahto, who were armed with lathis, caught
hold of Shibo Devi, mother of the informant and appellants Tulbul Mahto and
Shankar Mahto, who were also armed with lathis, caught hold of Shakho Devi,
sister of the informant inasmuch as they were taken to outer door of the house.
The informant raised alarm and when she came out from her courtyard, she saw
that accused Shrilal Sharma and Haro Sharma were assaulting her father and
mother with farsas and appellants Shankar Mahto, Tulbul Mahto and Sitaram
Mahto were assaulting them with lathis. Appellants Jharilal Mahto, Shankar
Mahto and co-accused Ram Bilash Mahto were assaulting Shakho Devi, sister of
the informant. Doman Mahto, father of the informant, died on the spot and when
the informant raised alarm, accused Shrilal Sharma gave a farsa blow to her in
order to kill her but it caused injury on her left palm. Thereafter the appellants
and their companions lifted the dead body of father of the informant and her
injured mother and sister and took them away. The informant along with her
nephew Arjun Mahto (PW.4) came to the village where they raised alarm on
which the villagers assembled, who, after arranging rickshaw, sent them to
Gangor Police outpost where the fard beyan of informant was recorded by A.S.I.
Dilip Kumar Singh (PW.1) on the basis of which formal first information report
was drawn up at the concerned police station against twelve accused persons
including the appellants.
Police after registering the case took up investigation during the course of
which dead body of Shibo Devi, mother of the informant, was recovered from a
river near Sohagi Ghat besides blood stained kurta which Doman Mahto, father
of the informant, was wearing. It transpired during investigation that sister of the
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informant, who was assaulted, succumbed to the injuries, but her dead body and
that of her father-Doman Mahto could not be recovered. Upon completion of
investigation, the police submitted charge sheet against all the accused persons,
on receipt whereof, learned Magistrate took cognizance and committed all the
twelve accused persons, including the appellants, to the court of Session to face
trial.
Defence of the accused was that they were innocent, falsely implicated
out of animosity and no occurrence much less the one alleged had taken place.
During trial, on behalf of the prosecution several documents were
exhibited and eleven witnesses were examined, out of whom, Satyanarain Mahto
(PW.2), Arjun Mahto (PW.4) and Liro Kumari, informant (PW.6) claimed to be
eye witnesses to the occurrence whereas other witnesses were police officials,
seizure witnesses, medical witnesses and some formal witnesses. Upon
conclusion of trial, the learned Additional Sessions Judge while convicting five
appellants of these appeals and accused Shrilal Sharma and Haro Sharma,
acquitted other five accused persons of all the charges. Accused Shrilal Sharma
and Haro Sharma were convicted under Sections 302, 201 and 148 of the Penal
Code and each of them was sentenced to undergo imprisonment for life and
rigorous imprisonment for a period of five years and two years respectively.
They were also convicted under Section 364 of the Penal Code but no separate
sentence was awarded. Accused Shrilal Sharma was further convicted under
Section 324 of the Penal Code and sentenced to undergo rigorous imprisonment
for two years. Five appellants of these two appeals were convicted under
Sections 364 and 147 of the Penal Code and each of them was sentenced to
undergo rigorous imprisonment for a period of ten years and one year
respectively. The sentences, however, were ordered to run concurrently. On
appeal being preferred by all the seven accused persons including the
appellants, their convictions and sentences have been upheld by the High Court
with this modification only that the conviction of accused Shrilal Sharma and
Haro Sharma under Section 302 has been converted into one under Section
302/149 of the Penal Code. Hence, two petitions for grant of special leave to
appeal were filed, one by Shankar Mahto and Sita Ram Mahto, who are
appellants in Criminal Appeal No. 195 of 2001 and the other from jail by accused
Shrilal Sharma, Haro Sharma, Hari Lal Mahto, Jhari Lal Mahto and Tulbul Mahto
out of whom the latter three are appellants in Criminal Appeal No. 196 of 2001.
Petition for grant of special leave to appeal filed by accused Shrilal Sharma and
Haro Sharma was rejected and leave to appeal was granted only in relation to
the five appellants of these two appeals.
Mr. Khwairakpam Nobin Singh, learned counsel who appeared as Amicus
Curie on behalf of the appellants in Criminal Appeal No. 196 of 2001 raised
three points in support of this appeal which have been adopted by Mr. Shambhu
Prasad Singh, learned counsel appearing on behalf of the appellants in Criminal
Appeal No. 195 of 2001. Firstly, it has been submitted that evidence of the two
child witnesses viz., PWs. 2 and 4, who claimed to be eye witnesses, was
rejected by the trial court on two grounds; (i) that there was no injury report in
respect of their injuries although they claimed to have received injuries by lathi
and (ii) their names were not disclosed by the informant either in the first
information report or in her statement made before the police and the High Court
was not justified in accepting their evidence. So far as first ground of attack for
rejection of their evidence which weighed with the trial court is concerned, the
High Court observed "it is true that PW.2 and PW.4 have stated that they also
received injuries by ’lathis’ and PW.4 has also stated that he and PW.2 along
with informant received treatment at hospital but then absence of injury reports in
respect of injuries on PW.2 and PW.4 can at best be a ground for raising doubt
on the point of their receiving injuries. It will not be a ground to discard their
entire evidence." In relation to the second ground which weighed with the trial
court, it would appear from judgment of High Court that the evidence of these
two witnesses has been thoroughly considered by it and it has been found that
they supported the prosecution case, disclosed in the first information report as
well as the evidence of Liro Kumari-informant (PW.6), in all material particulars.
The High Court while considering this ground observed "about the presence of
PW.2 and PW.4 at the relevant time at the place of occurrence in the statements
of informant given before the police, we have already discussed that the I.O. in
his evidence has admitted that the informant stated before him that at the time of
occurrence she was sitting near ’ghura’ along with her parents, sister and
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children of her family and PW.2 and PW.4 though not individually named in fard
beyan are definitely the children of the family of informant. If the informant in
fard beyan as well as in her statement before the police without giving specific
names of PW.2 and PW.4 has stated that at the relevant time children of her
family were also at the place of occurrence it will not negative the presence of
PW.2 and PW.4 at the place of occurrence." In our opinion, view taken by the
High Court was reasonable one, as such we do not find any merit in the
submission of the learned Amicus.
Learned Amicus next submitted that evidence of Ramo Devi (PW.5) that
she identified dead body recovered from the river to be of her mother Shibo Devi
by tattoo marks on the arms of the body does not inspire confidence because
identification by this means was not possible in view of the fact that such marks
disappear and the doctor (PW.9) did not find any tattoo marks on the dead body.
While dealing with this point, the High Court made reference to Modi’s Medical
Jurisprudence and Toxicology (at page 29 of Seventh Reprint of Twenty-first
Edition) in which it is stated that the tattoo marks may disappear if pigment
used is vermilion or ultra-marine and if it has not penetrated deep into the skin.
According to the evidence of PWs. 2, 5 and 6, both the arms of Shibo Devi,
deceased, were tattooed. The High Court has considered the evidence of PW.5
who identified dead body of her mother by face, ears, teeth as well and not by
tattoo marks only and her evidence suggests that when the dead body was
recovered, face of the deceased was visible and tattoo marks were present at
that time. The High Court was of the opinion that the fact that according to the
evidence of Dr. Rama Nand Kumar (PW.9) who held postmortem examination
on the dead body of Shibo Devi on 5th March, 1991 at 10.00 a.m., mentioned in
the postmortem report that the dead body was found badly decomposed and he
did not find any tattoo marks does not suggest that when the body was recovered
from the river on the previous day at 4.00 p.m., it was so badly decomposed that
the same could not have been identified by Ramo Devi (PW.5), who is none else
but daughter of Shibo Devi and she, by tattoo marks which were visible at that
time, identified the dead body to be of her mother which was not unusual. We
do not find that reasoning of the High Court suffers from any infirmity. Therefore,
this submission as well has no merit.
Learned Amicus then submitted that the Investigating Officer Shrinarain
Singh (PW.7) has admitted in his evidence that though he found blood at the
place of occurrence, but did not find any trail of blood around the place of
occurrence which falsifies the evidence of informant PW 6 that after assault when
her father was being carried away by the accused persons, blood was oozing out
from the injuries sustained by the deceased. While considering this question, the
High Court observed "if the blood was found where the deceased was inflicted
injuries and if it has not been found in the way it itself will not be a ground to
disbelieve prosecution evidence which otherwise is trustworthy. " The High Court
further observed that "in the present case, besides the father of informant who,
as alleged, died on the spot, the mother and sister of informant are said to have
been kidnapped by the appellants in order that they may be murdered. There is
consistent evidence of informant, PW.2 and PW.4 that the appellants after
assaulting the mother and sister of informant lifted them and took away them
along with the dead body of father of informant. The I.O. found blood stains at
the place of occurrence. In these circumstances, if the blood was not found
around the place of occurrence, it alone will not be sufficient to disbelieve the
evidence of informant, PW.2 and PW.4". Learned Amicus could not point out
any flaw in reasoning of the High Court. Moreover, as the prosecution case has
been supported in all material particulars by medical evidence as well apart from
other unimpeachable evidence already referred to by the High Court, we are of
the opinion that merely because the investigating officer did not find any trail of
blood, the place of occurrence cannot be doubted, especially when blood was
found there by the police. This being the position, we do not find any merit in this
contention too.
Mr. Shambhu Prasad Singh, learned counsel appearing on behalf of the
appellants in Criminal Appeal No. 195 of 2001 while adopting the submissions of
the learned Amicus, made a further submission that identification of the
appellants was highly doubtful as there was no source of identification . In our
view, the submission has been made only to be rejected. Firstly, it would be
impermissible for this Court to go into merit of this point and reconsider the same
as by rejection of Special Leave Petition filed by accused Shrilal Sharma and
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Haro Sharma, who were the main accused in this case and whose convictions
have been upheld, the same would be deemed to have been rejected. Apart
from that, PWs. 2, 4 and 6 have consistently stated in their evidence that it was a
moon lit night. The appellants were undisputedly known to members of the
prosecution party from before as such their identification by PWs. 2, 4 and 6 in
the moon lit night was quite possible. Moreover, according to the prosecution
case and the evidence of PWs. 2, 4 and 6 in the winter night when the accused
persons arrived at house of the informant, she along with three deceased
persons and children of her family was sitting near fire which was burning at the
outer door of her house. Therefore, otherwise also there could not have been
any difficulty in identifying the appellants in the light of fire as well. This being the
position, we do not find any substance in the submission of learned counsel
appearing on behalf of the appellants in Criminal Appeal No. 195 of 2001.
Both the learned counsel lastly submitted that sentence of ten years
imprisonment awarded against the appellants be reduced to the period of three
years which they have already undergone. We find that Section 364 of the Penal
Code prescribes two alternative punishments. First, imprisonment for life and
second, rigorous imprisonment for a term which may extend to ten years. In our
view, the trial court has not awarded the sentence of life imprisonment and by
taking a lenient view, awarded the alternative punishment of rigorous
imprisonment for ten years to each of the appellants which has been upheld by
the High Court. Keeping in mind the serious allegations made against the
appellants as well and the present case being a case of murder of three persons,
no interference is called for with the sentence awarded. No other point having
been raised, we do not find any ground to interfere with the well reasoned
judgment rendered by the High Court in which evidence has been discussed
threadbare.
In the result, the appeals fail and the same are accordingly dismissed.