Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BADRI RAI & ANOTHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF BIHAR
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
18/08/1958
BENCH:
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.
BENCH:
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
CITATION:
1958 AIR 953 1959 SCR 1141
ACT:
Evidence-Conspiracy to bribe a public servant-Statements of
co-conspirator-When admissible against others-Indian Penal
Code (Act 45 of 1860), ss. 120B, 165A-Indian Evidence Act (1
of 1872), s. 10.
HEADNOTE:
The appellants were prosecuted on charges under s. 120B read
with s. 165A of the Indian Penal Code, for having conspired
to commit the offence of bribing a public servant in
connection with the discharge of his public duties. The
case against them was that on August 24, 1953, when the
Inspector of Police who was in charge of the investigation
of a case in which the second appellant was involved, was on
his way to the police station, the appellants accosted him
on the road and the second appellant asked him to hush up
the case for valuable consideration. Some days later, on
August 31 the first appellant offered to the Inspector at
the police station a packet containing Rs. 500 in currency
notes and told him that the second appellant had sent the
money through him in pursuance of the talk that they had
with him on August 24, as a consideration for hushing up the
case. The courts below accepted the evidence adduced on
behalf of the prosecution and convicted the appellants. On
appeal by special leave it was contended that the court had
no reasonable grounds to believe that the appellants had
entered into a conspiracy to commit the offence and that the
statement of August 3 I was not admissible against the
second appellant because (1) the charge under s. 120B had
been deliberately added in order that the act or statement
of the one would be admissible against the other, and (2)
the object of the conspiracy, namely the payment of the hush
money, had been accomplished before the statement in
question was made:
Held, (1) that the incident of August 24 was evidence that
the intention to commit the offence had been entertained by
both the appellants on or before that date showing a clear
indication of the existence of the conspiracy, and that the
statement made by the first appellant on August 31 was
admissible not only to-prove that the second appellant had
constituted the first appellant his agent in the
perpetration of the crime but also to prove the existence of
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the conspiracy ; the court was therefore justified in
drawing up the charge under S. 120B along with that under s.
165A of the Indian Penal Code.
(2)that the payment of the bribe and the statement of
August 31 accompanying it, were part of the same
transaction, having been made in the course of the
conspiracy, and the
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statement in question was therefore admissible under s. 10
of the Indian Evidence Act.
Mirza Akbar v. The King Emperor, (1940) L. R. 67 I. A. 336
and R. v. Blake, (1844) 6 Q. B. 126, relied on.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 79 of
1956.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
September 7, 1955, of the Patna High Court in Criminal
Appeal No. 370 of 1954, arising out of the judgment and
order dated July 26, 1954, of the Court of the Special Judge
at Bhagalpur in Special Case No. 14 of 1954.
B. R. L. Iyengar, for appellant No. 1.
S. P. Sinha and P. C. Agarwala, for appellant No. 2.
R. C. Prasad, for the respondent.
1958. August 18. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
SINHA J.-This appeal by special leave is directed against
the concurrent judgments and orders of the courts below,
convicting the two appellants under S. 120B read with s.
165A, Indian Penal Code, and sentencing them to rigorous
imprisonment for 18 months, and to pay a fine of Rs. 200
each, and in default of payment of fine, to undergo further
rigorous imprisonment for 6 months. A separate conviction
under S. 165A has been recorded in respect of the first
appellant, Badri. Under this head, he has been sentenced to
rigorous imprisonment for 18 months, the sentence to run
concurrently with the sentence under the common charge.
The facts as found by the courts below, which could not be
successfully challenged before us, areas follows: The second
appellant, Ramji Sonar, is a goldsmith by profession and
runs a shop on the main road in the village Naogachia. In
that village there is a police station and the shop in
question is situated in between the police station building
and the residential quarters of the Inspector of police, who
was the First Informant in the case, resulting in the
conviction and
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sentences of the appellants as stated above. The first
appellant, Badri, runs a school for small boys in the same
village about 50 yards away from the shop a foresaid of the
second appellant. On August 22,1953, the First Informant,
who, holding the position of an Inspector of police, was in
charge of the police station, made a seizure of certain
ornaments and molten silver from a vacant building in front
of the house of the second appellant, Ramji. Those
ornaments were being melted by six strangers coining from
distant places, with implements for melting, said to have
been supplied by Ramji. The seizure was made on the
suspicion that the ornaments and the molten silver were
stolen property, which were to be sold to Ramji in a shape
which could not be identified with any stolen property.
After making the seizure-list of’ the properties, thus
seized, the police officer arrested Ramji, as also the other
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six strangers. -Ramji was .released on bail that very day.
Police investigations into the case, thus started, followed.
During that period, on August 24, 1953, at about 7-30 p.m.,
the Inspector was on his way from his residential quarters
to the police station, when both the appellants accosted him
on the road, and Ramji asked him to hush up the case for a
valuable consideration. The Inspector told them that he
could not talk to them on the road, and that they should
come to the police station. Thereafter, the Inspector
reported the matter to his superior officer, the D.S.P.
(P.W. 8), and to the sub-inspector, P.W. 9, attached to the
same police station. On August 31, the same year, the first
appellant, Badri, came to the police station,. saw the
Inspector in the central room of the thana, and offered to
him a packet wrapped in a piece of old newspaper, containing
Rs. 500 in currency notes. He told the Inspector, (P. W.
1), that the second appellant, Ramji, had sent the money
through him in pursuance of the talk that they had with him
in the evening of August 24, as a consideration for hushing
up the case that was pending against Ramji. At the time the
offer was made, a number of police officers besides a local
merchant, (P.W. 7), were present there. The Inspector at
once
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drew up the first information report of the offer of the
bribe on his own statement and prepared a seizure-list of
the money, thus offered, and at once arrested Badri and put
him in the thana lock-up. After the usual investigation the
appellants were placed on their trial, with the result
indicated above.
Both the courts below have found that the prosecution case,
a summary of which has been given above, has been proved by
good and reliable evidence, and that the defence case that
the prosecution was started by the inspector out of spite
and in order to defend himself against the consequences of
wrongfully arresting Ramji, was unfounded. We are not
impressed with the halting criticism of the evidence adduced
in this case on behalf of the prosecution and accepted by
the courts below. Ordinarily, this Court does not interfere
with concurrent findings of fact.
The only serious question raised in this appeal is the point
raised on behalf of the second appellant, Ramji, as to
whether the statement made by the first appellant, Badri, on
August 31, 1953, that he had been sent by the second
appellant with the money to be offered by way of bribe to
the police officer, was admissible against him. The learned
counsel for the appellant was not able clearly to formulate
his grounds of objection to the admissibility of that piece
of evidence, which is the basis of the charge against both
the accused persons. Section 10 of the Indian Evidence Act,
is a complete answer to this contention. The section is in
these terms:-
" 10. Where there is reasonable ground to believe that two
or more persons have conspired together to commit an offence
or an actionable wrong, anything said, done or written by
any one of such persons in reference to their common
intention, after the time when such intention was first
entertained by any one of them, is a relevant fact as
against each of the persons believed to be so conspiring, as
well for the purpose of proving the existence of the
conspiracy as for the purpose of showing that any such
person was a party to it. "
The incident of August 24, when both the appellants
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approached the inspector with the proposal that he should
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hush up the case against the second appellant, for which he
would be amply rewarded, is clear evidence of the two
persons having conspired to commit the offence of bribing a
public servant in connection with the discharge of his
public duties. There cannot, therefore, be the least doubt
that the court had reasonable grounds to believe that the
appellants had entered into a conspiracy to commit the
offence. Therefore, the charge under s. 120B had been
properly framed against both of them. That being so,
anything said or done by any one of the two appellants, with
reference to the common intention, namely, the conspiracy to
offer bribe, was equally admissible against both of them.
The statement made by the first appellant on August 31, that
he had been sent by the second appellant to make the offer
of the bribe in order to hush up the case which was then
under investigation, is admissible not only against the
maker of the statement-the first appellant-but also against
the second appellant, whose agent the former was, in
pursuance of the object of the conspiracy. That statement
is admissible not only to prove that the second appellant
had constituted the first appellant his agent in the
perpetration of the crime, as also to prove the existence of
the conspiracy itself. The incident of August 24, is
evidence that the intention to commit the crime had been
entertained by both of them on or before that date.
Anything said or done or written by any one of the two
conspirators on and after that date until the object of the
conspiracy had been accomplished, is evidence against both
of them.
It was faintly suggested on behalf of the second appellant,
that the charge under s. 120B of the Indian Penal Code, had
been deliberately added by the prosecution in order to make
the first appellant’s statement of August 31, admissible
against the second appellant, as otherwise it could not have
been used as evidence against him. As already indicated,
the incident of August 24, is a clear indication of the
existence of the conspiracy, and the court was perfectly
justified in drawing up the charge under s. 120B also. It
is no
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answer in law to say that unless the charge under that
section had been framed, the act or statement of one could
not be admissible against the other. Section 10 of the
Indian Evidence Act, has been deliberately enacted in order
to make such acts and statements of a co-conspirator
admissible against the whole body of conspirators, because
of the nature of the crime. A conspiracy is hatched in
secrecy and executed in darkness. Naturally, therefore, it
is not feasible for the prosecution to connect each isolated
act or statement of one accused with the acts or statements
of the others, unless there is a common bond linking all of
them together. Ordinarily, specially in a criminal case,
one person cannot be made responsible for the acts or
statements of another. It is only when there is evidence of
a concerted action in :furtherance of a common intention to
commit a crime, that the law has introduced this rule of
common responsibility, on the principle that every one
concerned in a conspiracy is acting as the agent of the rest
of them. As soon as the court has reasonable grounds to
believe that there is identity of interest or community of
purpose between a number of persons, any act done, or any
statement or declaration made, by any one of the co-
conspirators is, naturally, held to be the act or statement
of the other conspirators, if the act or the declaration has
any relation to the object of the conspiracy. Otherwise,
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stray acts done in darkness in prosecution of an object
hatched in secrecy, may not become intelligible without
reference to the common purpose running through the chain of
acts or illegal omissions attributable to individual members
of the conspiracy.
It was also suggested that the statement made by the first
appellant on August 31, about the purpose of the payment,
having been made after the payment, was not admissible in
evidence because the object of the conspiracy had been
accomplished before the statement in question was made.
Reliance was placed in this connection upon the decision of
their Lordships of the Judicial Committee in Mirza Akbar v.
The King Emperor.(1). But that decision is itself an answer
to the
(1) (1940) L.R. 67 I.A. 336.
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contention raised. The payment was made, and the statement
that it was being made with a view to hushing up the case
against the second appellant is a part of the same
transaction, that is to say, the statement accompanied the
act of payment of the bribe. Hence, it cannot be said that
the statement was made after the object of the conspiracy
had already been accomplished. The object of the conspiracy
was the hushing up of the criminal case against the second
appellant by bribing the public servant who was in charge of
the investigation of the case. The object of the conspiracy
was yet far from being accomplished when the statement in
question was made. The leading case on the subject is that
of R. v. Blake (1). That decision is an authority both for
the positive and the negative aspects of the question. It
lays down what is admissible and what is not admissible. It
held that the documents actually used in effectuating the
objects of the conspiracy, were admissible, and that those
documents which had been created by one of the conspirators
after the object of the conspiracy had been achieved, were
not admissible. section 10 of the Indian Evidence Act is on
the same lines. It is manifest that the statement in
question in the present case was made by the first appellant
in the course of the conspiracy, and accompanied the act of
the payment of the money, and is clearly covered by the
provisions of s. 10, quoted above. It must, therefore, be
held that there is no substance in the only question of law
raised in this appeal. It is, accordingly, dismissed.
Appeal dismissed.
(1) (1844) 6 Q.B. 126 ; 115 E.R. 49.
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