Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAM PRAKASH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF PUNJAB
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
02/09/1958
BENCH:
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
BENCH:
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.
WANCHOO, K.N.
CITATION:
1959 AIR 1 1959 SCR 1210
CITATOR INFO :
E 1964 SC1184 (3,7,14)
E 1968 SC 832 (9)
RF 1988 SC1883 (120)
ACT:
Criminal Law--Evidence--Retracted confession of co-accused-
Evidentiary value--Necessity of corroboration--Indian
Evidence Act, 1872 (1 of 1872), s. 30.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was tried along with P for the offence of
murder. The prosecution case was that the appellant, in
conspiracy with P who was employed as a servant in the house
of the deceased, took advantage of the deceased being alone
in the house with her child, went upstairs and killed her
and stole her ornaments, while P remained downstairs with
the child. The evidence upon which the prosecution relied
for conviction consisted of the confession of P, the
statement of the appellant which led to the recovery of the
ornaments belonging to the deceased from the possession of
the mistress of the appellant, the recovery of a blood-
stained dagger from his belongings at the police station and
his conduct after the murder. The confession of P was later
retracted by him in the Court of ’Session. It was contended
for the appellant that a retracted confession of an accused
cannot be used against his co-accused
Held, that a voluntary and true confession made by an
accused though it was subsequently retracted by him, can be
taken into consideration against a co-accused by virtue Of
s. 30 of the Indian Evidence Act, but as a matter of
prudence and practice the court should not act upon it to
sustain a conviction of the co-accused without full and
strong corroboration in material particulars both as to the
crime and as to his connection with that crime.
The amount of credibility to be attached to a retracted con-
fession would depend upon the circumstances of each
particular case.
Held, further, that on the evidence in the case the confes-
sion of P was voluntary and true and was strongly
corroborated in material particulars both concerning the
general story told in the confession concerning the crime
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and the appellant’s connection with crime.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal
Appeal No. 77 of 1958.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
February 26, 1958, of the Punjab High Court in Criminal
Appeal No. 860 of 1957, arising out
155
1220
of the judgment and order dated December 23, 1957, of the
Additional Sessions Judge at Ambala in Sessions No. 20 of
1957 and Trial No. 32 of 1957.
Harnam Singh and Sadhu Singh, for the appellant.
Har Parshad and T. M. Sen, for the respondent.
1958. September 2. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
IMAM J.-The appellant and one Prem were tried for the murder
of Nirmala Devi, wife of Banwari Lal, a Practising lawyer at
Rupar. The appellant was sentenced to death while Prem was
sentenced to imprisonment for life. The appellant and Prem
appealed against their conviction and sentence to the High
Court of Punjab. Their appeals were dismissed and their
conviction and sentence were affirmed by the High Court.
The appellant obtained from this Court special leave to
appeal and in the present appeal the only question for
consideration is whether the appellant was rightly convicted
and sentenced for the murder of Nirmala Devi. The case of
Prem is not before us.
At Rupar, Banwari Lal practised as a lawyer. His wife, the
deceased Nirmala Devi lived with him there with their child,
eight months old. With them also lived --Banwari Lal’s
sister Vina, a girl of about 16 to 17 years of age. Banwari
Lal had employed Prem as a servant about four months before
the murder of Nirmala Devi on February 12, 1957. This Prem
was a youngster of about fourteen years of age at that time.
According to the prosecution, lie was an associate of the
appellant who was posted at Rupar in the capacity of a foot-
constable in the police force. The appellant and Prem
became friendly and it is said that the appellant had an eye
on the ornaments of the deceased Nirmala Devi, which she was
in the habit of wearing when she went out. The deceased was
a young person in her twenties and of good character. She
used to be left alone in the house with her child, when
Banwari Lal went to court and Vina went to school. Prem,
however, used to remain at the house. It is the case of the
prosecution that the appellant in
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conspiracy with Prem took advantage of the deceased being
alone in the house, when the appellant went upstairs and
killed Nirmala Devi and stole her ornaments, while Prem
remained down-stairs with her child. Vina had returned from
school round about, 12-30 in the afternoon as it was the
recess time. At that time Nirmala Devi was in the drawing
room feeding her child. Prem was also at the house at that
time. Vina again returned to the house at about 3-45 p.m.
She enquired from Prem as to where Nirmala Devi was and was
told by him that he did not know as he himself had been
absent from the house. Vina, thereafter, went upstairs to
the kitchen to take her food. Banwari Lal had returned from
court at about 3-15 p.m., earlier than usual, as he had to
attend an election meeting at the Municipal Office. He was
accompanied by a pleader Sudarshan Kumar Jain who was going
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to Chandigarh. He had intended to give him a cup of tea,
but finding the door leading through the staircase to the
residential portion looked and thinking that his wife was
not at home, lie and his friend left for the Municipal Hall.
Banwari Lal returned to his house at about 4-45 p.m. He
enquired from Prem as to where his wife was and was informed
by him that she had gone out. He went upstairs and saw his
sister Vina eating her food. On opening the drawing room,
however, Banwari Lal was stunned to find his wife lying dead
on the floor in a pool of blood. lie noticed several
injuries on her and that some of her jewellery was missing.
He proceeded to the police station almost opposite to his
house and lodged a First Information Report about the murder
at 5 p.m.
There can be no manner of doubt that an audacious and a
brutal murder of a young and a defenceless person had taken
place with the intention of robbing her of her ornaments.
The fact of murder has been apply proved and has not been
seriously questioned. The only matter for consideration is
Whether the evidence established that the deceased Nirmala
Devi was murdered by the appellant with the assistance of
Prem.
The evidence upon which the prosecution relied for
1222
conviction is the confession of Prem, the statement of the
appellant which led to the recovery of the ornaments
belonging to Nirmala Devi from the possession of one Raj
Rani a mistress of the appellant, the recovery of a blood-
stained dagger from his belongings at the police station and
his conduct after the murder.
So far as the confession of Prem was concerned, it was
retracted by him in the Court of Session. Prem’s statement
under s. 342 to the Committing Magistrate, however, which
had been brought on to the record under s. 287 of the Code
of Criminal Procedure, clearly stated that the confession
was a voluntary one. Indeed, his statement to the
Committing Magistrate showed that the crime was committed by
the appellant and that Prem had assisted him in the
commission of that crime. Although in the Court of Session
Prem had retracted his confession, his memorandum of appeal
in the High Court would indirectly suggest that the con-
fession made by him was voluntary and true. Before we
consider whether the confession was a voluntary and a true
one, it is necessary to deal with the submission on behalf
of the appellant that the confession, having been retracted
by Prem, is irrelevant so far as the appellant is concerned
as the retracted confession of an accused cannot be used
against his co-accused.
Although on behalf of the appellant it had not been argued
that the retracted confession of Prem was inadmissible, we
regard the submission that it was irrelevant and cannot be
used against the appellant as tantamount to saying the same
thing. Section 30 of the Indian Evidence Act states:
" When more persons than one are being tried jointly for the
same offence, and a confession made by one of such persons
affecting himself and some other of such persons is proved,
the Court may take into consideration such confession as
against such other person as well as against the person who
makes such confession."
It will be clear from the terms of this section that where
more persons than one are being tried jointly for the same
offence, a confession made by any one of them affecting
himself and any one of his co-accused
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can be taken into consideration by the court not only
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against the maker of the confession but also against his co-
accused. The Evidence Act nowhere provides that if the
confession is retracted, it cannot be taken into
consideration against the co-accused or the confessing
accused. Accordingly, the provisions of the Evidence Act do
not prevent the Court from taking into consideration a
retracted confession against the confessing accused and his
co-accused. Not a single decision of any of the courts in
India was placed before us to show that a retracted
confession was not admissible in evidence or that it was
irrelevant as against a co-accused. An examination of the
reported decisions of the various High Courts in India
indicates that the preponderance of opinion is in favour of
the view that although it may be taken into consideration
against a co-accused by virtue of the provisions of s. 30 of
the Indian Evidence Act, its value was extremely weak and
there could be no conviction with out the fullest and
strongest corroboration on material particulars. The
corroboration in the full sense implies corroboration not
only as to the factum of the crime but also as to the
connection of the (co-accused with that crime. In our
opinion, there appears to be considerable justification for
this view. The amount of credibility to be attached to a
retracted confession, however, would depend upon the
circumstances of each particular case. Although a retracted
confession is admissible against a co-accused by virtue of
s. 30 of the Indian Evidence Act, as a matter of prudence
and practice a court would not ordinarily act upon it to
convict a co-accused without corroboration. On this basis
it is now to be seen whether the confession was voluntary
and true. It will then be necessary to consider whether the
confession has received full and strong corroboration in
material particulars both as to the crime and the
appellant’s connection with that crime.
It was strongly urged that the police had adopted a device
to get the accused Prem into their custody again on a charge
of theft as lie had already been placed in the judicial
lock-up after his arrest in
1224
connection with the murder of the deceased Nirmala Devi. He
was arrested on June 25, 1957, in connection with a burglary
which had taken place on December 5, 1956, and he had been
since then in police custody in connection with the
investigation of that case until July 10, 1957, the last day
of remand to police custody. On July 10, 1957, Prem made a
confession before a Magistrate concerning the murder of
Nirmala Devi. Prem was discharged in the burglary case on
July 20, 1957. Having adopted this device of getting Prem
into police custody the police were in a position to
exercise great influence upon Prem, a, young’ lad of about
14 years of age. When lie made his confession on July 10,
1957, he must have been still labouring under the influence
of the police and sufficient time was not given by the
Magistrate to remove that influence. The Magistrate ought
not to have recorded his confession on July 10, 1957. He
ought to have remanded Prem to jail custody for a few days
in order that the police influence may be removed from his
mind. We have examined the record and find no justification
for the suggestion made that the police adopted a device to
got the accused Prem in to their custody again by arresting
him in the burglary case of December 5, 1956. It is true
that the accused Prem was discharged from the burglary case
on July 20, 1957, but there is nothing on the present record
to suggest that his arrest in the burglary case of December
5, 1956, was without justification and that it was done
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purely for the purpose of getting him back into police
custody. It is true that Prem had been in police custody
from June 25, 1957 to July 10, 1957, and the Magistrate
might as well have refrained from recording his confession
on July 10, 1957. It is clear, however, from the record of
the Magistrate that at 1 p.m. the accused Prem was produced
before him by the police for the recording of his
confession. The Magistrate told him that lie was not a
police officer but a Magistrate and that he was at liberty
to think over the matter whether he would volunteer to make
a confession and gave him time, until 2 p.m. for this
purpose. He further explained to Prem that he should
1225
consider himself quite free and not make a statement under
the influence or temptation of anybody. At 2 p.m. the
Magistrate took various precautions. All the doors and the
windows of his room were closed. Everyone, except Prem, was
turned out. The police were asked to stand in the verandah
from where they could not see Prem. Prem was again told
that he must regard himself as quite free and should not be
under the influence of the police or anybody else. The
Magistrate then put a series of questions which have been
recorded in the form of questions and answers. By question
7, the Magistrate enquired how long Prem had been in police
custody and from where he bad been brought that day, to
which, the answer was that some 5 months back he had been
arrested since then sometimes he had been sent to jail and
sometimes had been kept in police custody. By question 8,
the Magistrate asked whether he was kept awake during that
period or had been given greased diet (Mnaggan giza, etc.),
which we understand to mean whether he had been given greasy
food which would induce a sleepy condition in persons eating
such food, to which question he replied that he had enjoyed
regular sleep and had been taking common diet. At the
beginning, of course, the police had kept him awake. The
Magistrate also enquired whether the police or any other
person had made any promise or had given any undertaking to
help Prem or had given all temptation to him or had
influenced or frightened him. If so, he should state this
fully from his heart, to which Prem replied that he had not
been given any promise, temptation or inducement, nor was he
subjected to fear or exhortation. He had been merely asked
to make a true statement. Prem then said that he would make
his statement of his own free will and the Magistrate could
believe him or not. The Magistrate also asked Prem whether
any one had beaten him or if there was any mark of injury on
his body, to which, the answer was ’no’. The Magistrate
then examined the body of Prem and found that there was no
mark of injury on his person. The Magistrate then asked as
to why he was making a confession, to which, Prem answered
1226
that he was doing so of his own free will and to lessen the
burden of his heart. The nature of the questions put and
the manner in which the Magistrate examined Prem clearly
showed that the Magistrate took every precaution to be
satisfied whether Prem was going to make a voluntary
statement. We are satisfied that during the period of
police custody between the 25th of June and July 10, 1957,
Prem was not induced to make a confession. He made the
confession voluntarily. That the confession was voluntary
finds support from Prem’s statement to the Committing
Magistrate under s. 342 of the Code of’ Criminal Procedure.
In that statement Prem told the Magistrate in answer to
various questions the following story: He had been employed
as a domestic servant by the lawyer Banwari Lal. He had
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developed during this period friendship with the appellant.
The appellant had told him that he would commit rape on
Nirmala Devi and would rob her of her ornaments and, if she
resisted, he would murder her. He informed the appellant on
February 11, 1957, that Nirmala -Devi would be alone in her
house at about mid -day on February 12, 1957. He had
received on February 11, 1957, a dagger wrapped in a pajama
from the appellant and bad kept it in the store behind the
office of Banwari Lal On February 12, 1957, he informed the
appellant that Nirmala Devi was alone in the house. He had
handed over the dagger and the pajama to the appellant on
February 12, after taking it out of the store room. The
appellant had sought his assistance in the commission of
rape, robbery and murder of Nirmala Devi and he had been
promised a half share in the booty. To the question whether
he had kept watch over the house of Banwari Lal when the
appellant entered it for committing rape, robbery and murder
of Nirmala Devi, Prem answered that he was made to stand
near the stair-case by the appellant and that he kept watch
while the appellant committed the crime. He finally
admitted to the Committing Magistrate that the confession
which had been recorded on July 10, 1957, was a voluntary
confession. When asked whether he had to say anything else,
Prem told the Committing
1227
Magistrate that he had made a true statement before him and
also in the Court of the Magistrate who had recorded his
confession. Shorn of details the substance of the story
told by Prem to the Committing Magistrate is in keeping with
the substance of his confession recorded on July 10, 1957.
It is to be further remembered that the statement of Prem to
the Committing Magistrate was brought on to the record of
the Court of Session under s. 287 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure which directs that the statement should be read as
evidence. Although Prem retracted the confession in the
Court of Session, his memorandum of appeal filed in the High
Court showed that he had acted under the influence of the
appellant and had been allured by him to achieve his object.
He, however, pleaded that be should not have received such
severe punishment. On the contrary, lie should have been
acquitted. These circumstances clearly indicate that the
confession recorded on July 10, 1957, was a voluntary
confession. It remains now to be seen whether it was a
truthful confession.
Prem asserted in his confession that he had acquaintance
with the appellant previous to the appellant’s posting to
Rupar and their association continued at Rupar. There is
nothing inherently improbable in this story of Prem. It is
true that there is not much evidence to corroborate Prem.
that lie and the appellant were acquainted and used to
associate. Banwari Lal had seen them talking to each other
once or twice before the murder. The police station at
which the appellant was posted was almost opposite to the
house of Banwari Lal where Prem was employed as a servant
and there was every probability of the appellant and Prem
meeting. It is significant that on the day of murder of
Nirmala Devi, in the afternoon, Prem was present in the
compound of the police station with a child in a
perambulator. Foot-constable Gurbachan Singh, P.W. 4,
enquired from Prem as to why he had gone inside the police
station. On this the appellant asked Gurbachan Singh not to
remonstrate with Prem as he was a mere, boy. Gurbachan
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1228
Singh had stated that previously he had never seen Prem
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going inside the police station with a perambulater. The
intervention of the appellant suggests that he knew Prem and
was friendly towards him. Prem’s story that he was employed
as a servant by Banwari Lal is corroborated by the evidence
of Banwari Lal himself, his sister Vina and his clerk
Naranjan Das. In the nature of things there could be no
corroboration of Prem’s story about the appellant’s proposal
to rape and rob Nirmala Devi and, if necessary, to murder
her. According to Prem’s confession a day before the murder
he had been given a dagger by the appellant along with a
_pajama and that Prem took the pajama and the dagger to the
upper storey of Banwari Lal’s house having concealed it in
the kothri of firewood which was near the office room of
Banwari Lal. This part of his story receives corroboration
from the evidence of Banwari Lal that after the murder he
had found a blood-stained pajama, Exbt. P. 14, banging on
the door of the store room which is at the back of the
residential portion of the house. Banwari Lal is supported
by Nand Lal, P.W. 34, Motor Mobile Patrol Sub-Inspector, who
recorded the First Information of Banwari Lal. According to
him, he found the pajama hanging on one of the shutters of
an almirah fixed in the wall in the fuel room situate at the
back of the room where Nirmala Devi was found lying dead.
It was bloodstained. Banwari Lal had clearly stated that
this pajama did not belong to him or any one in his house.
The existence of the pajama in Banwari Lal’s house lends
corroboration to the story of Prem that he had been given
this pajama and that he had concealed it in the kothri of
fire-wood near the office of Banwari Lal. The statement of
Prem that he had asked Raj sabziwala to bring down the
perambulator of the child and that he did so, finds
corroboration from the evidence of Gurbachan Singh that in
the afternoon he found Prem accused in the police station
with a child in a perambulator.
The presence of the accused Prem at Banwari Lal’s house near
about the time of the murder appears to
1229
be clear. When Vina had left for her school at 9-45 a.m.,
Prem was in the house. Vina returned to the house from
her school at about 12-30 noon. At that time Prem was
present in the verandah in front of the office. When she
finally returned from the school at about 3-45 p.m.,
apparently Prem was not in the house but arrived shortly
thereafter. The murder was committed at any time between
12-30 p.m. and 2-15 p.m. if the appellant was the murderer,
because Gurbachan Singh’s evidence showed that the appellant
was at the thana at 2-15 p.m. Apparently, the appellant went
out with Gurbachan Singh and returned to the thana with him
in time for Gurbachan Singh to be on duty from 3 p.m. If the
appellant was the murderer he must have committed the murder
before 2-15 p.m. Nirmala Devi was alive at 12-30 p.m. when
Vina saw her feeding her child. Assuming that Vina did not
stay long, as she had come to get some money to purchase a
copy-book, it would not be unreasonable to assume that
Nirmala Devi was alive up to 12-40 or 12-45 p.m. The
interval of time between that and 2-15 p.m., when the
appellant was seen at the police station, is about 1 1/2
hours. It would be probable that during this time Prem was
present in the house and when he says that lie was present
there there is no inherent improbability in his statement.
At 3-45 p.m., when Vina arrived, no doubt Prem was not in
the house, but he came shortly thereafter and Vina took from
him the child of Nirmala Devi. This clearly shows that Prem
had gone out of the house with the child of Nirmala Devi
which one would not normally expect him to do at that time
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of the day, if Nirmala Devi had left the house to do
shopping or to visit anyone. If Nirmala Devi was in the
house and alive it was most unlikely that Prem accused would
have taken her child out of the house. Prem’s statement
that he was amusing the child while the appellant was doing
his nefarious work appears to be true, because the child was
with him and he had been seen at the police station with a
child in a perambulator. If the circumstances tend to show
that in all probability Prem was in the house from 12-30
p.m. to 2-15 p.m. then his
1230
story that he was present at the house when the appellant
came there appears to be a truthful statement. It is
significant that when Vina arrived at the house at 3-45 p.m.
she found the door of the stair-case locked. When Prem
arrived she saw the key in his hand, although Prem had said
it was lying on the floor. He opened the lock of the door
of the stair-case with that key and Vinia went upstairs to
the second floor where she went to the kitchen and took her
food. When Banwari Lal arrived at his house at about 3-15
p.m. he found his office room locked from outside. He
wanted to go to the residential portion for taking tea, but
found the door of the stair-case locked from outside.
Finding the door of the stair-case leading to the
residential portion of his house locked, he came down and
went away in connection with the election work. On his
return he enquired from Prem about the whereabouts of his
wife and Prem told him that she had gone out. He wished to
go upstairs to the residential portion of the house and Prem
at his request opened the lock of the stair-case, the key
being with him. According to Banwari Lal, the usual
practice was to lock the door of the office which adjoins
the stair-case and to bolt the other door from inside, but
on the day of the murder the door adjoining the stair-case
was looked while the other door was lying open. Banwari
Lal’s clerk, Naranjan Das, came to the house at 4-15 or 4-30
p.m. He went up to the verandah in front of the office and
found both the doors of the office locked from outside. He
asked Prem to open the office, but Prem told him that the
key of one of the locks which was fixed on the door
adjoining the stair-case, had been lost. He gave the key of
the other lock and then Prem took out a key from his pocket
and opened the lock fixed on the other door of the office.
There is no reason to distrust all this evidence which would
indicate that after Vina had left the house on her first
visit at about 12-30 p.m. the two doors were locked from
outside which was something unusual and that the keys of the
looks of these doors were with Prem. He had given evasive
answers about the keys to Vinia and Naranjan Das
1231
while the key was in his pocket. These circumstances also
indicate the truthfulness of Prem’s statement that he was
present in the house during the period in which Nirmala Devi
was murdered. His statement in the confession that the
appellant had locked the door and had thrown the key in tile
office verandah and that while he sat there, the child,
while playing, picked up the key and that he said to the
girl (presumably Vina) there was the key and then he un-
locked the door appears to be true. Reference in some
detail to the various statements of Prem in the confession
and the circumstances proved by the evidence of various
witnesses became necessary in order to ascertain whether
Prem had made a truthful statement about his presence at the
house during the period in which Nirmala Devi was murdered
and also as to the part he had played in assisting the
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appellant to commit the murder. While it is true that in
the confession Prem does not attribute to himself any
participation in the murder itself, it is not to be for-
gotten that the murder of Nirmala Devi could not have taken
place without his aid. Whoever entered the house of Banwari
Lal in broad day light could not have gone upstairs without
the knowledge and cooperation of Prem. According to his
statement lie knew what was the intention of the appellant
and to assist him in the accomplishment of his purpose he
had concealed in his master’s house the pajama and the
dagger given to him by the appellant. If he did not
actually participate in the murder he would be equally
guilty of the murder if that murder was committed with his
aid and his connivance. The confession, as a whole,
concerning the murder of the deceased appears to us to be
true and we have no hesitation, after a very careful
consideration of all the circumstances appearing in the
case, in saying so. In our opinion, Prem’s confession was
not only voluntary and true but it had been corroborated in
material particulars regarding the general story told by him
in his confession. The other question which now remains for
consideration is whether the confession received material
corroboration connecting the appellant with the murder of
Nirmala Devi.
1232
Amongst the appellant’s possessions a dagger was recovered
which appeared to be blood-stained but owing to the long
delay in sending it to the Chemical Examiner its origin
could not be determined. From the medical evidence it
appears that the dagger in question could have inflicted the
kind of injuries suffered by Nirmala Devi. The most
important corroboration, however, is the recovery of the
ornaments of the deceased. These ornaments, according to
Banwari Lal, she had been wearing on the day of the murder
when he left for court. On some statement made by the
appellant his mistress Raj Rani was visited by the
authorities and in the presence of respectable witnesses
some ornaments were recovered and they were identified as
the ornaments of the deceased. The evidence of Raj Rani
also showed that these ornaments were given to her by the
appellant. She apparently had no reason to depose against
the appellant, because she had said in her evidence that she
wished to meet the appellant before giving clue to the
ornaments and that she wished to give the ornaments to the
police in his presence. The defence case was not that these
ornaments did not belong to the deceased but that, on the
contrary, they were hers but had been produced by Banwari
Lal during the police investigation and that it was falsely
alleged that they had been recovered from Raj Rani. The
evidence of Charan Dass, P. W. 24, President of the
Municipal Committee of Rupar, however, clearly shows that in
his presence the appellant made a statement to the police to
the effect that one gold kara and seven gold bangles had
been given by him to Raj Rani. This statement was made on
August 3, 1957. His evidence also shows that on August 9,
1957, he accompanied the police party from Rupar to Jangpura
and that Raj Rani took them to her sister’s house. She
brought out a trunk from inside the room. She opened the
lock of the trunk and produced from it a tin box which
contained a gold kara and seven gold bangles. The evidence
of GoriShanker, a Municipal Commissioner of Rupar is to the
same effect and corroborated Charan Dass. The courts below
believed these two witnesses. We have examined
1233
their evidence with some care in view of the submission on
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behalf of the appellant that they should not be relied upon.
There is nothing in their evidence to show that they were in
any way hostile to the appellant or had any motive to depose
against him. The courts below having believed these
witnesses, we would not ordinarily go behind their view on a
question of fact. Having regard, however, to the con-
sequences which arise as a result of the acceptance of their
evidence in this particular case, we have examined their
evidence in the light of the submission made on behalf of
the appellant. It was suggested that at the earlier stage
the police investigation was not properly conducted and the
public were dissatisfied. A deputation of influential
persons met the Chief Minister as a result of which a more
active and thorough investigation took place. It may be
that influential persons of Rupar interviewed the Chief
Minister, being dissatisfied with the manner in which the
investigation was taking place. There is, however, nothing
to show that Charan Dass or Gori Shanker were amongst those
who had interviewed the Chief Minister or that they had
taken part in any agitation against the police concerning
the manner of the investigation. It is difficult to believe
that two responsible persons such as the President of the
Municipal Committee and one of its members would go out of
their way to depose to certain events which would provide
very strong evidence against the appellant and lead to his
conviction on a capital charge, unless they had really heard
the statement of the appellant and witnessed the recovery as
deposed to by them. It was then suggested that, apparently,
Charan Dass had no real reason to go to the police station
on August 3, 1957, and, therefore, his story that he heard
the appellant make the statement which led to the recovery
of the ornaments was false. Charan Dass, however, had
stated the reason for his visiting the police station. He
went there to complain to the police that people parked
their push-carts in the bazar and thus obstructed the
passage. In our opinion, as the President of the Municipal
Committee of Rupar, if a nuisance was
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being created by people parking their push-carts in the
bazar, it was a natural thing for him to go to the police
station in order to get such obstruction removed and for the
police to see that the nuisance did not continue. We can
find nothing strange in the conduct of Charan Dass or Gori
Shanker in having gone to the police station in the
circumstances deposed to by them. We have no hesitation in
believing the evidence of Charan Dass and Gori Shanker that
the appellant made a statement to the effect that he had
given one gold kara and seven gold bangles to Raj Rani and
that the same were recovered from Raj Rani in their
presence. It would appear, therefore, on the evidence of
Raj Rani and these witnesses, that not long after the murder
of Nirmala Devi the appellant was in possession of her
ornaments and that he had given them to Raj Rani. The
ornaments being in possession of the appellant soon after
the murder would show that he either stole the ornaments or
was in possession of them knowing or having reason to
believe that they were stolen properties. Nirmala Devi had
been murdered by someone who had stolen her ornaments.
According to the confession of Prem it was the appellant who
had gone up-stairs where Nirmala Devi was Sometime after the
departure of Vina. He had given the appellant the pajama
and the dagger. Thereafter, the appellant left the house
leaving the pajama behind. After the departure of the
appellant no outsider entered the house. It is clear,
therefore, that in order to steal the ornaments the thief
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killed Nirmala Devi. The circumstances clearly indicate
that the thief was no other than the appellant. It seems to
us, therefore, that the confession of Prem receives strong
and substantial corroboration connecting the appellant with
the crime of the murder of the deceased Nirmala Devi.
The conduct of the appellant from 2-15 p.m. onwards clearly
shows that he was in a disturbed state of mind which is
consistent with his having committed the crime, It is
curious that lie was uttering the word I Nirmala. It had
been suggested to Gurbachan Singh that the Assistant Sub-
Inspector Rikhi Ram had a
1235
daughter with whom the appellant had illicit connection and
that her name was Nirmala, but the witness stated that he
had no knowledge about it. The appellant in his statement
under s. 342 of the Code of Criminal Procedure before the
Sessions Judge admitted that he was shouting out the name of
Nirmala but he had a love affair with a girl named Nirmala,
daughter of Rikhi Ram. We are not prepared to accept the
explanation of the appellant as to how he was calling out
the name of Nirmala so soon after the murder of Nirmala
Devi. This conduct of the appellant may not by itself have
been corroboration of sufficient importance to enable a
court to convict the appellant on the retracted confession
of Prem. No stronger and no better corroboration, however,
of the confession of Prem could be had than the evidence
which showed that the appellant had been in possession of
Nirmala Devi’s ornaments soon after her murder.
There were several comments made on the evidence by the
learned Advocate for the appellant, but those comments were
with reference to unimportant matters and were not at all
relevant. In an appeal by special leave it is not
ordinarily permissible to make submissions on questions of
fact. The principal matter with which we have been
concerned in this appeal was whether the confession of Prem
had been corroborated in material particulars regarding the
general story told by him and in material particulars
tending to connect the appellant with the murder of the
deceased. We have no hesitation in saying that the
confession of Prem has been amply corroborated in both
respects. Recovery of the ornaments of the deceased at the
instance of the appellant incriminated him to the fullest
extent and lent the strongest corroboration to the con-
fession of Prem from which it was apparent that no other
person than the appellant could have murdered Nirmala Devi.
The appeal is accordingly dismissed.
Appeal dismissed.
157
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