Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 821 of 2000
Appeal (crl.) 160 of 2001
PETITIONER:
SURESH AND ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF U.P
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 02/03/2001
BENCH:
R.P. Sethi & B.N. Agrawal
JUDGMENT:
SETHI, J. for himself and Agrawal,J.
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We agree with the conclusions arrived at by Brother
Thomas,J. in his lucid judgment.@@
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However, in view of the importance of the matter, in so
far as the interpretation of Section 34 of the Indian Penal
Code is concerned, we have chosen to express our views in
the light of consistent legal approach on the subject
throughout the period of judicial pronouncements. For the
applicability of Section 34 to a co-accused, who is proved
to have common intention, it is not the requirement of law
that he should have actually done something to incur the
criminal liability with the aid of this section. It is now
well settled that no overt act is necessary to attract the
applicability of Section 34 for a co-accused who is
otherwise proved to be sharing common intention with the
ultimate act done by any one of the accused sharing such
intention.
Section 34 of the Indian Penal Code recognises the
principle of vicarious liability in the criminal
jurisprudence. It makes a person liable for action of an
offence not committed by him but by another person with whom
he shared the common intention. It is a rule of evidence
and does not create a substantive offence. The section
gives statutory recognition to the commonsense principle
that if more than two persons intentionally do a thing
jointly, it is just the same as if each of them had done it
individually. There is no gainsaying that a common
intention pre-supposes prior concert, which requires a pre-
arranged plan of the accused participating in an offence.
Such a pre- concert or pre-planning may develop on the spot
or during the course of commission of the offence but the
crucial test is that such plan must precede the act
constituting an offence. Common intention can be formed
previously or in the course of occurrence and on a spur of
moment. The existence of a common intention is a question
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of fact in each case to be proved mainly as a matter of
inference from the circumstances of the case.
Dominant feature for attracting Section 34 of the Indian
Penal Code (hereinafter referred to as "the Code") is the@@
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element of participation in absence resulting in the@@
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ultimate "criminal act". The "act" referred to in latter
part of Section 34 means the ultimate criminal act with
which the accused is charged of sharing the common
intention. The accused is, therefore, made responsible for
the ultimate criminal act done by several persons in
furtherance of the common intention of all. The section
does not envisage the separate act by all the accused
persons for becoming responsible for the ultimate criminal
act. If such an interpretation is accepted, the purpose of
Section 34 shall be rendered infructuous. Participation in
the crime in furtherance of the common intention cannot
conceive of some independent criminal act by all accused
persons, besides the ultimate criminal act because for that
individual act law takes care of making such accused
responsible under the other provisions of the Code. The
word "act" used in Section 34 denotes a series of acts as a
single act. What is required under law is that the accused
persons sharing the common intention must be physically
present at the scene of occurrence and be shown to not have
dissauded themselves from the intended criminal act for
which they shared the common intention. Culpability under
Section 34 cannot be excluded by mere distance from the
scene of occurrence. The presumption of constructive
intention, however, has to be arrived at only when the court
can, with judicial servitude, hold that the accused must
have pre-conceived result that ensued in furtherance of the
common intention. A Division Bench of the Patna High Court
in Shatrughan Patar & Ors. v. Emperor [AIR 1919 Patna 111]
held that it is only when a court with some certainty hold
that a particular accused must have pre-conceived or
pre-meditated the result which ensued or acted in concert
with others in order to bring about that result, that
Section 34 may be applied.
In Barendra Kumar Ghosh vs. King Emperor [AIR 1925 PC
1] the Judicial Committee dealt with the scope of Section 34
dealing with the acts done in furtherance of the common
intention, making all equally liable for the results of all
the acts of others. It was observed:
".......the words of S.34 are not to be eviscerated by
reading them in this exceedingly limited sense. By S.33 a
criminal act in S.34 includes a series of acts and, further,
"act" includes omissions to act, for example, an omission to
interfere in order to prevent a murder being done before
one’s very eyes. By S.37, when any offence is committed by
means of several acts whoever intentionally co-operates in
the commission of that offence by doing any one of those
acts, either singly or jointly with any other person,
commits that offence. Even if the appellant did nothing as
he stood outside the door, it is to be remembered that in
crimes as in other things ’they also serve who only stand
and wait’. By S.38, when several persons are engaged or
concerned in the commission of a criminal act, they may be
guilty of different offences by means of that act. Read
together, these sections are reasonably plain. S.34 deals
with the doing of separate acts, similar of diverse, by
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several persons; if all are done in furtherance of a common
intention, each person is liable for the result of them all,
as if he had done them himself, for ’that act’ and ’the act’
in the latter part of the section must include the whole
action covered by ’a criminal act’ in the first part,
because they refer to it. S.37 provides that, when several
acts are done so as to result together in the commission of
an offence, the doing of any one of them, with an intention
to co-operate in the offence (which may not be the same as
an intention common to all), makes the actor liable to be
punished for the commission of the offence. S.38 provides
for different punishments for different offences as an
alternative to one punishment for one offence, whether the
persons engaged or concerned in the commission of a criminal
act are set in motion by the one intention or by the other."
(Emphasis supplied)
Referring to the presumption arising out of Section 114
of the Evidence Act, the Privy Council further held:
"As to S.114, it is a provision which is only brought
into operation when circumstances amounting to abetment of a
particular crime have first been proved, and then the
presence of the accused at the commission of that crime is
proved in addition; Abhi Misser v. Lachmi Narain [1900
(27) Cal.566]. Abetment does not in itself involve the
actual commission of the crime abetted. It is a crime
apart. S.114 deals with the case where there has been the
crime of abetment, but where also there has been actual
commission of the crime abetted and the abettor has been
present thereat, and the way in which it deals with such a
case is this. Instead of the crime being still abetment
with circumstances of aggravation, the crime becomes the
very crime abetted. The section is evidentiary not
punitory. Because participation de facto(as this case
shows) may sometimes be obscure in detail, it is established
by the presumption juris et de jure that actual presence
plus prior abetment can mean nothing else but participation.
The presumption raised by S.114 brings the case within the
ambit of S.34.
"(Emphasis supplied)
The classic case on the subject is the judgment of the
Privy Council in Mahboob Shah vs. Emperor [AIR 1945 PC
118]. Referring to Section 34 prior to its amendment in
1870 wherein it was provided:
"When a criminal act is done by several persons, each of
such persons is liable for that act in the same manner as if
the act was done by him alone."
it was noticed that by amendment, the words "in
furtherance of common intention of all" were inserted after
the word "persons" and before the word "each" so as to make
the object of Section clear. Dealing with the scope of
Section, as it exists today, it was held:
"Section 34 lays down a principle of joint liability in
the doing of a criminal act. The section does not say ’the
common intention of all’ nor does it say ’an intention
common to all’. Under the section, the essence of that
liability is to be found in the existence of a common
intention animating the accused leading to the doing of a
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criminal act in furtherance of such intention. To provide
the aid of S.34 successfully, it must be shown that the
criminal act complained against was done by one of the
accused persons in the furtherance of the common intention
of all; if this is shown, then liability for the crime may
be imposed on any one of the persons in the same manner as
if the act were done by him alone. This being the
principle, it is clear to their Lordships that common
intention within the meaning of the section implies a pre-
arranged plan, and to convict the accused of an offence
applying the section it should be proved that the criminal
act was done in concert pursuant to the pre-arranged plan.
As has been often observed, it is difficult if not
impossible to procure direct evidence to prove the intention
of an individual; in most cases it has to be inferred from
this act or conduct or other relevant circumstances of the
case."
(Emphasis supplied)
A Full Bench of the Patna High Court in The King Emperor
vs. Barendra Kumar Ghose [AIR 1924 Cal. 257] which was
later approved by the Privy Council dealt with the scope of
Section 34 in extenso and noted its effects from all
possible interpretations put by various High Courts in the
country and the distinguished authors on the subject. The
Court did not agree with the limited construction given by
Stephen,J. in Emperor v. Nirmal Kanta Roy [1914 (41)
Cal.1072] and held that such an interpretation, if accepted,
would lead to disastrous results. Concurring with
Mookerjee,J. and giving the section wider view
Richardson,J. observed:
"It appears to me that section 34 regards the act done
as the united act of the immediate perpetrator and his
confederates present at the time and that the language used
is susceptible of that meaning. The language follows a
common mode of speech. In R. v. Salmon [1880 (6) QBD 79]
three men had been negligently firing at a mark. One of
them - it was not known which - had unfortunately killed a
boy in the rear of the mark. They were all held guilty of
manslaughter. Lord Coleridge, C.J. said: -’The death
resulted from the action of the three and they are all
liable’. Stephen,J. said:- ’Firing a rifle’ under such
circumstances ’is a highly dangerous act, and all are
responsible; for they unite to fire at the spot in question
and they all omit to take any precautions whatever to
prevent danger.
Moreover, sections 34, 35 and 37 must be read together,
and the use in section 35 of the phrase ’each of such
persons who joins in the act’ and in section 37 of the
phrase, ’doing any one of those acts, either singly or
jointly with any other person’ indicates the true meaning of
section 34. So section 38 speaks of ’several persons
engaged or concerned in a criminal act’. The different mode
of expression may be puzzling but the sections must, I
think, be construed as enunciating a consistent principle of
liability. Otherwise the result would be chaotic.
To put it differently, an act is done by several persons
when all are principals in the doing of it, and it is
immaterial whether they are principals in the first degree
or principals in the second degree, no distinction between
the two categories being recognised.
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This view of section 34 gives it an intelligible content
in conformity with general notions. The opposing view
involves a distinction dependent on identity or similarity
of act which, if admissible at all, is wholly foreign to the
law, both civil and criminal, and leads nowhere."
Approving the judgments of the Privy Council in Barendra
Kumar Ghose and Mahboob Shah’s cases (supra) a three Judge@@
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Bench of this Court in Pandurang & Ors. v. State of@@
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Hyderabad [AIR 1955 SC 216] held that to attract the
applicability of Section 34 of the Code the prosecution is
under an obligation to establish that there existed a common
intention which requires a pre-arranged plan because before
a man can be vicariously convicted for the criminal act of
another, the act must have been done in furtherance of the
common intention of all. This Court had in mind the
ultimate act done in furtherance of the common intention.
In the absence of a pre-arranged plan and thus a common
intention even if several persons simultaneously attack a
man and each one of them by having his individual intention,
namely, the intention to kill and each can individually
inflict a separate fatal blow and yet none would have the
common intention required by the section. In a case like
that each would be individually liable for whatever injury
he caused but none could be vicariously convicted for the
act of any or the other. The Court emphasised the sharing
of the common intention and not the individual acts of the
persons constituting the crime. Even at the cost of
repetition it has to be emphasised that for proving the
common intention it is necessary either to have direct proof
of prior concert or proof of circumstances which necessarily
lead to that inference and "incriminating facts must be
incompatible with the innocence of the accused and incapable
of explanation or any other reasonable hypothesis". Common
intention, arising at any time prior to the criminal act, as
contemplated under Section 34 of the Code, can thus be
proved by circumstantial evidence.
In Shreekantiah Ramayya Munipalli & Anr. v. State of
Bombay [AIR 1955 SC 287] this Court held:@@
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"It is true there must be some sort of preliminary
planning which may or may not be at the scene of the crime
and which may have taken place long beforehand, but there
must be added to it the element of physical presence at the
scene of occurrence coupled with actual participation which,
of course, can be of a passive character such as standing by
a door, provided that is done with the intention of
assisting in furtherance of the common intention of them all
and there is a readiness to play his part in the
pre-arranged plan when the time comes for him to act."
(Emphasis supplied)
This Court again in Takaram Ganapat Pandare v. State of
Maharashtra [AIR 1974 SC 514] reiterated that Section 34
lays down the rule of joint responsibility for criminal act
performed by a plurality of persons and even mere distance
from the scene of crime cannot exclude the culpability of
the offence. "Criminal sharing, overt or covert, by active
presence or by distant direction making out a certain
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measure of jointness in the commission of the act is the
essence of Section 34".
In a case where the deceased was murdered by one of the
two accused with a sharp edged weapon at 10.30 p.m. while
he was sleeping on a cot in his house while the other
accused, his brother, without taking part stood by with a
spear in his hand to overcome any outside interference with
the attainment of the criminal act and both the accused ran
away together after the murder, this Court in Lalai alias
Dindoo & Anr. v. State of U.P. [AIR 1974 SC 2118] held
that these facts had a sufficient bearing on the existence
of a common intention to murder.
In Ramaswami Ayyangar & Ors. v. State of Tamil Nadu
[AIR 1976 SC 2027] this Court declared that Section 34 is to@@
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be read along with preceding Section 33 which makes it clear@@
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that the "act" mentioned in Section 34 includes a series of
acts as a single act. The acts committed by different
confederates in the criminal action may be different but all
must in one way or the other participate and engage in the
criminal enterprise. Even a person not doing any particular
act but only standing guard to prevent any prospective aid
to the victims may be guilty of common intention. However,
it is essential that in case of an offence involving
physical violence it is essential for the application of
Section 34 that such accused must be physically present at
the actual commission of crime for the purposes of
facilitating accomplishment of "criminal act" as mentioned
in that section. In Ramaswami’s case (supra) it was
contended that A2 could not be held vicariously liable with
the aid of Section 34 for the act of other accused on the
grounds: firstly he did not physically participate in the
fatal beating administered by co-accused to the deceased and
thus the "criminal act" of murder was not done by all the
accused within the contemplation of Section 34; and
secondly the prosecution had not shown that the act of A2 in
beating PW was committed in furtherance of the common
intention of all the three pursuant to a pre-arranged plan.
Repelling such an argument this Court held that such a
contention was fallacious which could not be accepted. The
presence of those who in one way or the other facilitate the
execution of the common design itself tantamounts to actual
participation in the "criminal act". The essence of Section
34 is simultaneously consensus of the minds of persons
participating in the criminal action to bring about a
particular result. Conviction of A2 under Section 302/34 of
the Code in that case was upheld.
In Rambilas Singh & Ors. v. State of Bihar [AIR 1989
SC 1593] this Court held:
"It is true that in order to convict persons vicariously
under S.34 or S.149 IPC, it is not necessary to prove that
each and everyone of them had indulged in over acts. Even
so, there must be material to show that the overt act or
acts of one or more of the accused was or were done in
furtherance of the common intention of all the accused or in
prosecution of the common object of the members of the
unlawful assembly." (Emphasis supplied)
Again a three Judge Bench of this Court in State of U.P.
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v. Iftikhar Khan & Ors. [1973 (1) SCC 512] after relying
upon the host of judgments of Privy Council and this Court,
held that for attracting Section 34 it is not necessary that
any overt act must be done by a particular accused. The
section will be attracted if it is established that the
criminal act has been done by one of the accused persons in
furtherance of the common intention. If this is shown, the
liability for the crime may be imposed on any one of the
person in the same manner as if the act was done by him
alone. In that case on proof of the facts that all the four
accused persons were residents of the same village and
accused Nos.1 and 3 were brothers who were bitterly inimical
to the deceased and accused Nos.2 and 4 were their close
friends, accused Nos.3 and 4 had accompanied the other two
accused who were armed with pistols; all the four came
together in a body and ran away in a body after the crime
coupled with no explanation being given for their presence
at the scene, the Court held that the circumstances led to
the necessary inference of a prior concert and
pre-arrangement which proved that the "criminal act" was
done by all the accused persons in furtherance of their
common intention.
In Krishnan & Anr. v. State of Kerala [JT 1996 (7) SC
612] this Court even assuming that one of the appellants had@@
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not caused the injury to the deceased, upheld his conviction@@
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under Section 302/34 of the Penal Code holding:
"Question is whether it is obligatory on the part of the
prosecution to establish commission of overt act to press
into service section 34 of the Penal Code. It is no doubt
true that court likes to know about overt act to decide
whether the concerned person had shared the common intention
in question. Question is whether overt act has always to be
established? I am of the view that establishment of a overt
act is not a requirement of law to allow section 34 to
operate inasmuch this section gets attracted when "a
criminal act is done by several persons in furtherance of
common intention of all". What has to be, therefore,
established by the prosecution is that all the concerned
persons had shared the common intention. Court’s mind
regarding the sharing of common intention gets satisfied
when overt act is established qua each of the accused. But
then, there may be a case where the proved facts would
themselves speak of sharing of common intention: res ipsa
loquitur."
In Surender Chauhan v. State of M.P. [2000 (4) SCC
110] this Court held that apart from the fact that there
should be two or more accused, two factors must be
established - (i) common intention and (ii) participation of
the accused in the commission of the offence. If a common
intention is proved but no overt act is attributed to the
individual accused, Section 34 will be attracted as
essentially it involves vicarious liability. Referring to
its earlier judgment this Court held:
"Under Section 34 a person must be physically present at
the actual commission of the crime for the purpose of
facilitating or promoting the offence, the commission of
which is the aim of the joint criminal venture. Such
presence of those who in one way or the other facilitate the
execution of the common design is itself tantamount to
actual participation in the criminal act. The essence of
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Section 34 is simultaneous consensus of the minds of persons
participating in the criminal action to bring about a
particular result. Such consensus can be developed at the
spot and thereby intended by all of them (Ramaswami Ayyangar
v. State of T.N. 1976 (3) SCC 779]. The existence of a
common intention can be inferred from the attending
circumstances of the case and the conduct of the parties.
No direct evidence of common intention is necessary. For
the purpose of common intention even the participation in
the commission of the offence need not be proved in all
cases. The common intention can develop even during the
course of an occurrence. (Rajesh Govind Jagesha v. State
of Maharashtra 1999 (8) SCC 428). To apply Section 34 IPC
apart from the fact that there should be two or more
accused, two factors must be established" (i) common
intention, and (ii) participation of the accused in the
commission of an offence. If a common intention is proved
but no overt act is attributed to the individual accused,
Section 34 will be attracted as essentially it involves
vicarious liability but if participation of the accused in
the crime is proved and a common intention is absent,
Section 34 cannot be invoked. In every case, it is not
possible to have direct evidence of a common intention. It
has to be inferred from the facts and circumstances of each
case." For appreciating the ambit and scope of Section 34,
the preceding Sections 32 and 33 have always to be kept in@@
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mind. Under Section 32 acts include illegal omissions.@@
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Section 33 defines the "act" to mean as well a series of
acts as a single act and the word "omission" denotes as well
a series of omissions as a single omission. The distinction
between a "common intention" and a "similar intention" which
is real and substantial is also not to be lost sight of.
The common intention implies a pre-arranged plan but in a
given case it may develop at the spur of the moment in the
course of the commission of the offence. Such common
intention which developed at the spur of the moment is
different from the similar intention actuated by a number of
persons at the same time. The distinction between "common
intention" and "similar intention" may be fine but is
nonetheless a real one and if overlooked may lead to
miscarriage of justice.
After referring to Mahboob Shah’s case (supra) this
Court in Mohan Singh & anr. vs. State of Punjab [AIR 1963
174] observed, it is now well settled that the common
intention required by Section 34 is different from the same
intention or similar intention. The persons having similar
intention which is not the result of pre-concerted plan
cannot be held guilty for the "criminal act" with the aid of
Section 34. Similarly the distinction of the words used in
Section 10 of the Indian Evidence Act "in reference to their
common intention" and the words used in Section 34 "in
furtherance of the common intention" is significant.
Whereas Section 10 of the Indian Evidence Act deals with the
actions done by conspirators in reference to the common
object, Section 34 of the Code deals with persons having
common intention to do a criminal act.
In State through Superintendent of Police, CBI/SIT vs.
Nalini & Ors. [1995 (5) SCC 253] Brother Thomas,J. in his
judgment dealt with such a proposition in paras 107 and 108.
However, in this case on facts, the prosecution has not
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succeeded in proving that A3 Pavitri Devi shared the common
intention with the other two accused persons, one of whom
was her husband and the other her brother. It has come in
evidence that when the witnesses reached on the spot, they
found the said accused standing on the road whereas the
other accused were busy committing the crime inside the
house. The exaggerated version of PW3 regarding the
participation of Pavitri Devi by allegedly catching hold of
his mother’s hair cannot be accepted as PWs 1 and 2 have not
supported the aforesaid version. The High Court was,
therefore, justified in holding that Pavitri Devi, A3 did
not share the common intention with the other accused
persons. By her mere presence near the place of occurrence
at or about the time of crime in the absence of other
evidence, direct or circumstantial, cannot hold her guilty
with the aid of Section 34. But in case the prosecution had
succeeded in proving on facts of her sharing of common
intention with A1 and A2, she could not be acquitted of the
charge framed against her only on the ground that she had
actually not done any overt act. The appeal of the State
filed against Pavitri Devi has no merit and has thus rightly
been dismissed by Brother Thomas,J.
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