Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 241 of 1998
PETITIONER:
Chanda and Ors.
RESPONDENT:
State of U.P. & Anr.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 29/04/2004
BENCH:
DORAISWAMY RAJU & ARIJIT PASAYAT.
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
ARIJIT PASAYAT,J
Conviction of the accused-appellant was altered by
the Division Bench of the Allahabad High Court from
Section 302 read with Section 149 to Section 304 Part I
read with Section 149 of the Indian Penal Code 1860 (in
short ’IPC’). Life imprisonment as awarded by the Trial
Court was altered to 10 years imprisonment for the
altered conviction under Section 304 Part I IPC. The
Trial Court had not awarded any separate sentence for
the other offences.
Background facts alleged by the prosecution leading
to the trial are essentially as follows:
Hashim Khan (PW-1) lodged an FIR at about 1330
hours on 3.10.1977 in which the time of incident was
stated to be 1300 hours on the same day. Distance of
place of incident from police station was about one
mile. As per FIR, PW-1, the complainant is the resident
of village Lodhipur. The accused Chanda fired a shot at
his uncle in the year 1975, a case was registered
against him and that case was pending. Second time, in
the year 1976, Sayeed and accused Chanda fired a shot on
Qasim, the brother of the complainant. This case was
about to be proceeded for trial in the Court.
Accordingly, there was an old enmity between Qasim
(hereinafter referred to as ’deceased’) and the accused.
Because of this enmity on 3.10.1977 at about 1.00 p.m.,
when deceased was coming back from Shahjahanpur city to
his native village Lodhipur, near the Check post at
Lodhipur accused-Chanda and his brothers accused Zakir
and Shakir sons of Shujat Ali and Abbas son of
Jameeluddin, Hameeduddin head of the village (Mukhia),
Zaheer Shah son of Ghafoor (of the same village) and
Nanneh alias Ishaq son of Ishtiayaq who is the brother-
in-law of Chanda were standing there. Accused Sartaj
and Chanda were holding country made pistol in their
hands. Accused Zaheer exhorted and asked others to take
Qasim, and he should not escape. Thereupon deceased
Qasim raised alarm and ran towards the city. All of a
sudden, Chanda fired a shot at him, which did not hit
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him. Thereafter, all the accused persons chased deceased
Qasim, and after some distance accused Zakir, Shakir,
Nanneh, Abbas and others caught hold of deceased and
Sartaj fired a shot at him from a close distance due to
which he fell down on the road. This incident was
witnessed by complainant (PW-1), Naim (PW-2) and Sajid
Ali of the same village and by-passers that sight
persons after shooting the gun went away towards
Lodhipur. The complainant came to police station by
putting Qasim on a Rickshaw in the injured condition.
The deceased breathed his last on 11.1.1978. He prayed
for the registration of the case and for appropriate
action.
On completion of investigation charge sheet was
placed. To substantiate its accusations 8 witnesses were
examined including PW-1 Hashim Khan, Naim (PW-2) and
Samiulla (PW-3) who claimed to be eye witnesses.
Accused persons pleaded innocence and stated that they
were falsely implicated due to enmity.
After considering the evidence on record the Trial
Court found that there was mistake in describing the
father’s name of accused Sartaj. Accused-Zakir was
acquitted because he was a crippled person and in the
dying declaration of the deceased no role was ascribed
to him. Similar was the position so far as accused
Hameeduddin is concerned.
In appeal, the High Court altered the conviction so
far as the accused persons who were found guilty by the
Trial Court to Section 304 Part I IPC read with Section
149. Custodial sentence of 10 years was imposed.
Conviction in terms of Section 307 read with Section 149
was maintained.
Mr. U.R. Lalit, learned senior counsel appearing
for the appellants submitted that since Sartaj who is
supposed to have fired the gunshot he has been
acquitted, Section 149 cannot have any application.
Though the alleged occurrence took place on 3.10.1977,
the deceased died on 11.1.1978. In all nine injuries
were found at the time of post-mortem though at the
first instance one injury was noticed on his back. It
is not known as to what happened in between. According
to the medical evidence, the death was on account of
septicemia. Other injuries could have also attributed to
septicemia. It is not possible to arrive at a
conclusion, as injuries were difficult to be identified.
From the nature of the injury attributed to be the fatal
shot, it cannot be said that there was any intention or
knowledge about the injury. Therefore, Section 302 has
been rightly taken out as inapplicable. Consequently the
case is out of the scope of Section 299 and, therefore,
Section 304 Part I cannot have any application. There
is no concrete evidence to show that the accused persons
were the members of the unlawful assembly which had any
common object. Eight persons were named and it is not a
case of the prosecution that any other person committed
the murder. The definite case was that Sartaj accused
had fired fatal shot. That being so, after his acquittal
Section 149 cannot be applied and the Trial Court and
the High Court have lost sight of this fact. The
deceased was first taken to one hospital for treatment
and subsequently taken to another hospital and finally
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post-mortem was conducted after his death in the third
hospital. What type of treatments were given and what
was the effect of different injuries has not been
established by the prosecution. Definite roles have not
been attributed to the accused persons. It was,
therefore, submitted that Courts below were not
justified in holding accused persons guilty.
Learned counsel for the State submitted that Sartaj
was not acquitted on the ground that he has not fired a
shot. The acquittal was on the ground of mistake in the
father’s name. The evidence also shows that Chanda had
fired a shot which did not hit the deceased. Therefore,
clearly common object was killing of the deceased.
Apart from that other accused persons restrained the
deceased to facilitate the killing. Pellets were found
inside the body as clearly noted by the doctor.
The pivotal question is applicability of Section
149 IPC. Said provision has its foundation on
constructive liability which is the sine qua non for its
operation. The emphasis is on the common object and not
on common intention. Mere presence in an unlawful
assembly cannot render a person liable unless there was
a common object and he was actuated by that common
object and that object is one of those set out in
Section 141. Where common object of an unlawful
assembly is not proved, the accused persons cannot be
convicted with the help of Section 149. The crucial
question to determine is whether the assembly consisted
of five or more persons and whether the said persons
entertained one or more of the common objects, as
specified in Section 141. It cannot be laid down as a
general proposition of law that unless an overt act is
proved against a person, who is alleged to be a member
of unlawful assembly, it cannot be said that he is a
member of an assembly. The only thing required is that
he should have understood that the assembly was unlawful
and was likely to commit any of the acts which fall
within the purview of Section 141. The word ’object’
means the purpose or design and, in order to make it
’common’, it must be shared by all. In other words, the
object should be common to the persons, who compose the
assembly, that is to say, they should all be aware of it
and concur in it. A common object may be formed by
express agreement after mutual consultation, but that is
by no means necessary. It may be formed at any stage by
all or a few members of the assembly and the other
members may just join and adopt it. Once formed, it need
not continue to be the same. It may be modified or
altered or abandoned at any stage. The expression ’in
prosecution of common object’ as appearing in Section
149 have to be strictly construed as equivalent to ’in
order to attain the common object’. It must be
immediately connected with the common object by virtue
of the nature of the object. There must be community of
object and the object may exist only up to a particular
stage, and not thereafter. Members of an unlawful
assembly may have community of object up to certain
point beyond which they may differ in their objects and
the knowledge, possessed by each member of what is
likely to be committed in prosecution of their common
object may vary not only according to the information at
his command, but also according to the extent to which
he shares the community of object, and as a consequence
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of this the effect of Section 149, IPC may be different
on different members of the same assembly.
’Common object’ is different from a ’common
intention’ as it does not require a prior concert and a
common meeting of minds before the attack. It is enough
if each has the same object in view and their number is
five or more and that they act as an assembly to achieve
that object. The ’common object’ of an assembly is to be
ascertained from the acts and language of the members
composing it, and from a consideration of all the
surrounding circumstances. It may be gathered from the
course of conduct adopted by the members of the
assembly. What the common object of the unlawful
assembly is at a particular stage of the incident is
essentially a question of fact to be determined, keeping
in view the nature of the assembly, the arms carried by
the members, and the behaviour of the members at or near
the scene of the incident. It is not necessary under law
that in all cases of unlawful assembly, with an unlawful
common object, the same must be translated into action
or be successful. Under the Explanation to Section 141,
an assembly which was not unlawful when it was
assembled, may subsequently become unlawful. It is not
necessary that the intention or the purpose, which is
necessary to render an assembly an unlawful one comes
into existence at the outset. The time of forming an
unlawful intent is not material. An assembly which, at
its commencement or even for some time thereafter, is
lawful, may subsequently become unlawful. In other words
it can develop during the course of incident at the spot
eo instante.
Section 149, IPC consists of two parts. The first
part of the section means that the offence to be
committed in prosecution of the common object must be
one which is committed with a view to accomplish the
common object. In order that the offence may fall within
the first part, the offence must be connected
immediately with the common object of the unlawful
assembly of which the accused was member. Even if the
offence committed is not in direct prosecution of the
common object of the assembly, it may yet fall under
Section 141, if it can be held that the offence was such
as the members knew was likely to be committed and this
is what is required in the second part of the section.
The purpose for which the members of the assembly set
out or desired to achieve is the object. If the object
desired by all the members is the same, the knowledge
that is the object which is being pursued is shared by
all the members and they are in general agreement as to
how it is to be achieved and that is now the common
object of the assembly. An object is entertained in the
human mind, and it being merely a mental attitude, no
direct evidence can be available and, like intention,
has generally to be gathered from the act which the
person commits and the result therefrom. Though no hard
and fast rule can be laid down under the circumstances
from which the common object can be called out, it may
reasonably be collected from the nature of the assembly,
arms it carries and behaviour at or before or after the
scene of occurrence. The word ’knew’ used in the second
limb of the section implies something more than a
possibility and it cannot be made to bear the sense of
’might have been known’. Positive knowledge is
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necessary. When an offence is committed in prosecution
of the common object, it would generally be an offence
which the members of the unlawful assembly knew was
likely to be committed in prosecution of the common
object. That, however, does not make the converse
proposition true; there may be cases which would come
within the second part but not within the first part.
The distinction between the two parts of Section 149
cannot be ignored or obliterated. In every case it
would be an issue to be determined, whether the offence
committed falls within the first part or it was an
offence such as the members of the assembly knew to be
likely to be committed in prosecution of the common
object and falls within the second part. However, there
may be cases which would be within first part of the
offences committed in prosecution of the common object
would also be generally, if not always, within the
second part, namely, offences which the parties knew to
be likely committed in the prosecution of the common
object. (See Chikkarange Gowda and others v. State of
Mysore AIR 1956 SC 731).
The other plea that definite roles have not been
ascribed to the accused and therefore Section 149 is not
applicable, is untenable. A 4-Judge Bench of this Court
in Masalti and Ors. v. State of U.P. (AIR 1965 SC 202)
observed as follows:
"Then it is urged that the
evidence given by the witnesses conforms
to the same uniform pattern and since no
specific part is assigned to all the
assailants, that evidence should not
have been accepted. This criticism
again is not well-founded. Where a crowd
of assailants who are members of an
unlawful assembly proceeds to commit an
offence of murder in pursuance of the
common object of the unlawful assembly,
it is often not possible for witnesses
to describe accurately the part played
by each one of the assailants. Besides,
if a large crowd of persons armed with
weapons assaults the intended victims,
it may not be necessary that all of them
have to take part in the actual assault.
In the present case, for instance,
several weapons were carried by
different members of the unlawful
assembly, but it appears that the guns
were used and that was enough to kill 5
persons. In such a case, it would be
unreasonable to contend that because the
other weapons carried by the members of
the unlawful assembly were not used, the
story in regard to the said weapons
itself should be rejected. Appreciation
of evidence in such a complex case is no
doubt a difficult task; but criminal
courts have to do their best in dealing
with such cases and it is their duty to
sift the evidence carefully and decide
which part of it is true and which is
not."
To similar effect is the observation in Lalji v.
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State of U.P. (1989 (1) SCC 437). It was observed that:
"Common object of the unlawful assembly
can be gathered from the nature of the
assembly, arms used by them and the
behaviour of the assembly at or before
the scene of occurrence. It is an
inference to be deduced from the facts
and circumstances of each case."
In State of U.P. v. Dan Singh and Ors. (1997 (3)
SCC 747) it was observed that it is not necessary for
the prosecution to prove which of the members of the
unlawful assembly did which or what act. Reference was
made to Lalji’s case (supra) where it was observed that
"while overt act and active participation may indicate
common intention of the person perpetrating the crime,
the mere presence in the unlawful assembly may fasten
vicariously criminal liability under Section 149". It
is not really necessary to determine as to which of the
accused persons forming part of the unlawful assembly
inflicted what particular or specific injury in the
course of the occurrence. That the number of actually
convicted persons are less than five or that the case
projected certain one or more named persons as having
inflicted the injury but the same could not vis-a-vis
that person actually be proved to have actually
committed it or that such persons came to be acquitted
for some reason or other peculiar to him does not in any
manner prejudice the case of the prosecution or the
liability of others who formed the unlawful assembly to
be convicted for having carried out the object by merely
being the members of the unlawful assembly, as long as
the participation of others in furtherance of the common
object of the unlawful assembly remained sufficiently
substantiated.
The medical evidence is that death was the result
of vertebral injury. The prosecution has established
that the injury was on account of firing. Therefore, it
is not correct as contended by learned counsel for the
appellant that the death was due to septicemia and
cannot in any manner be attributed to the gunshot which
turned out to be fatal. It is significant that on post-
mortem three pellets were found on cutting open the
wound over the lower part of left leg. The medical
evidence fits in with the ocular evidence. The physical
consequences of the gunshot as noticed on post-mortem
when read with ocular evidence leaves no manner of doubt
about application of Section 304 Part I IPC. The
evidentiary effect of the fire-shot fired by accused
Chanda which missed the deceased has been clearly
established. The evidence on record clearly establishes
that there was an unlawful assembly whose common object
was to kill the deceased. That being so, acquittal of
accused Sartaj does not wipe out application of Section
149 IPC. The second part of Section 149 IPC clearly has
application to the facts of the case.
It cannot, therefore, be said that the prosecution
has failed to establish its accusations so far as
accused persons are concerned. We find no merit in this
appeal which is accordingly dismissed.
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