Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MOHAR RAI & BHARATH RAI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF BIHAR
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
22/03/1968
BENCH:
HEGDE, K.S.
BENCH:
HEGDE, K.S.
BACHAWAT, R.S.
CITATION:
1968 AIR 1281 1968 SCR (3) 525
CITATOR INFO :
D 1971 SC2233 (10)
R 1976 SC2263 (11)
RF 1988 SC 863 (7,8,20)
R 1990 SC1459 (9)
ACT:
Criminal Trial-Trial Court and High Court refusing to
examine accused’s defence on ground their version had
already been rejected in another case filed on a complaint
by accused-if permissible.
Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898, Ss. 145, 154, 157 & 168-
document containing statement of accused in investigation
accused not examined as witness-whether document Admissible
evidence.
HEADNOTE:
The first appellant was convicted under.s. 324 IPC for
shooting and injuring PW 1, at the instigation of the second
appellant, who was himself convicted of an offence under s.
324 read with s. 109 IPC. The existence of enmity between
the appellants and most of the prosecution witnesses who
spoke to the occurrence was satisfactorily established. The
plea of the appellants in their defence was that on the date
of the incident when they were returning home in the
evening, they were way-laid by PWI and several others and
were assaulted; thereafter with a view to foist a false case
against them, a revolver was forcibly thrust into the hands
of the first appellant. In connection with this incident,
the State came to initiate three prosecutions : One case was
instituted on the basis of a complaint by the first
appellant; a second case was commenced against the first
appellant under s. 19(f) of the Indian Arms Act for being
armed with a revolver; and the third was the present case.
The case instituted on the first appellant’s complaint as
well as the case against him under the Arms Act were both
dismissed.
The trial court as well as the High Court refused to examine
the defence of the appellants solely on the ground that the
case pleaded by them had been rejected by the Magistrate in
the prosecution commenced on these basis of the complaint by
the first appellant. In appeal to this Court it was
contended on behalf of the appellants that they did not have
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a fair trial; the High Court as well as the trial court on
an erroneous view of the law refused to take their defence
into consideration; they ignored important circumstances
appearing in favour of the appellants; and furthermore, some
of the conclusions reached by them were unsupported by any
evidence on record. It was also contended that an
inadmissible document, namely a statement made by, the
’second appellant in the course of the investigation was
wrongly admitted; this admission was hit by a. 162 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure which bad also greatly prejudiced
the case of the appellants.
HELD : The appeals must be allowed and the appellants
acquitted.
(i) The trial court as well as the High Court erred in
summarily ejecting the defence of the appellants on the sole
ground that the version put forward by them having been
rejected by the Magistrate in the case filed on the
complaint of the first appellant, it could not be considered
again. The defence of the appellants was highly
Probabilised by three important circumstances, namely, (1)
it was put forward immediately after the occurrence, (2) it
satisfactorily explained the injuries found on the persons
of the appellants while the prosecution evidence failed to
526
explain those injuries; and (3) the prosecution evidence
itself showed that the first appellant could not have used
the revolver exhibited and therefore his version that weapon
was thrust on him was probabilised. [531 H-532 B]
In both the prosecutions-in the complaint made by the first
appellant as well as in the complaint made by P.W.I-the
prosecutor before the court was the State. Therefore, the
decision in the former case could not operate as an issue-
estoppel against the appellants in the present case, because
they were not parties in the former case. In other words,
the plea taken by the appellants in this case was never
before litigated between them and the State, the Opposite
party in the present case. All that ran be said is that the
case put forward by the State in the one case was in-
consistent with that put forward by it in the other. In
those circumstances it was wrong to hold that the appellants
were estopped from putting forward their defence. 1531 B-D]
Pritam Singh v. The State of Punjab, A.I.R. 1956 S.C. 415;
Manipur Administration v. Thokchom, Bira Singh, (1964]
S.C.R. 123; Sambasivam v.Public Prosecutor, [1950] A.C. 458;
and King v. Wilkes; 77 C.L.R. 511 at pp. 518-519, referred
to.
(ii) The trial court and the High Court relied on the second
appellant’s statement in the document admitted in evidence
to the effect that it was a particular person who fired a
pistol to contradict the statement of the first appellant in
his complaint that a pistol was fired by some other person.
No portionof this statement could have been used for
that purpose either s. 157 ors. 145 of the Evidence Act.
As the second appellant was not examined as a witness in the
present case, his previous statement could not have been
used either to contradict his evidence or corroborate it
even if it were to be held that it was a statement falling
under s.154 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. [532 H-533 B]
Nazir Ali, v. State of U.P. A.I.R. 1957 S.C. 366;
distinguished.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeals Nos. 159
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and 160 of 1965.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment and order dated
July 28, 1965 of the Patna High Court in Criminal Appeal
Nos. 533 and 534 of 1963.
R. K. Garg, D. P. Singh, S. C. Agarwala, S. P. Singh and
K.M. K. Nair, for the appellants (in both the appeals).
B. P. Jha, for the respondent (in both the appeals.)
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Hegde, J. In these connected appeals by special leave the
legality of the convictions of the appellants-appellant
Mohar Rai under s. 324 of the Indian Penal Code and
appellant Bharath Rai under s. 324/109 of the Indian Penal
Code-is challenged. In the trial court the former was
convicted under s. 307 of the Indian Penal Code and the
latter under s. 307/109 of the Indian Penal Code. The High
Court of Patna, in appeal, altered their convictions as set
out above.
In order to appreciate the contentions advanced on behalf of
the appellants, it is necessary to state briefly the
prosecution as
527
well as the defence version. The case made out by the
prosecution is that because of previous enmity Mohar Rai
shot and injured P.W. I Balli Ahir, at the instigation of
Bharath Rai,, on the evening of October 8, 1961, in Natwar
Bazar. The existence of enmity between the appellants and
most of the prosecution witnesses who speak to the
occurrence, is satisfactorily established. Many of the
prosecution witnesses appear to have been proceeded against
under s. 107 of the Code of Criminal Procedure at the
instance of the appellants. The plea of the appellants was
that on the day of incident when they were returning to
their house in the evening they were way-laid by P.W.1 and
several others; one of those persons fired shots at Mohar
Rai, but it missed him; to save himself he (Mohar Rai) ran
away from the scene, subsequently two more shots were fired;
meanwhile he got into the house of Lal Bahadur Mistri
(P.W.9), but his assailants pursued him, forced their entry
into the house of P.W.9 and there assaulted him; thereafter
with a view to foist a false case against him forcibly
thrust into his hands the revolver (Ex-II) and then handed
him over with Ex.III to Janardan Singh (P.W. 15), the police
constable. ThE plea of Bharath Rai was that during the
incident mentioned by Mohar Rai, he was caught hold of and
assaulted by some of the prosecution witnesses. The High
Court and the trial court have rejected the plea of the
appellants and relying on the prosecution evidence convicted
the appellants as mentioned earlier. This Court being a
Court of special jurisdiction does not reassess the evidence
in a case except under exceptional circumstances. It was
urged on behalf of the appellants that they did not have a
fair trial, the High Court as well as the trial court on an
erroneous view of the law refused to take into consideration
their defence, they ignored important circumstances
appearing in their favour and further some of the
conclusions reached by them are unsupported by any evidence
on record. We have to see how far these-submissions are
well-founded.
Out of the incident mentioned above, the State came to ini-
tiate as many as three prosecutions. G. R. Case 1370/TR-20
of 61/63 in the Court Of the Munsif-Magistrate I Class,
Sasaram was instituted on the basis of the complaint lodged
by Mohar Rai. G.R. 506 of 1962 on the file of the Munsif-
Magistrate I Class, Sasaram was a case under s. 19(f) of the
Indian Arms Act against Mohar Rai for being armed with a
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revolver at the time of the incident mentioned earlier. The
third case is the one with which we are concerned in these
appeals. The case instituted on the basis of the complaint
made by Mohar Rai was acquitted on February 1, 1963. The
Arms-Act case ended in acquittal on May 13, 1964. The
appeal against that order was dismissed by the High Court of
Patna on September 5, 1966. A copy of the judgment in that
appeal was produced at the hearing of these
528
appeals and received as additional evidence with our permis-
sion.
The trial court as well as the High Court refused to examine
the defence of the appellants solely on the ground that the
case pleaded by them had been rejected by the learned
Munsif-Magistrate I Class, Sasaram in the prosecution
commenced at the instance of Mohar Rai.
The prosecution case was that immediately after the occur-
rence, Mohar Rai was chased and caught and at that time he
had in his hands the revolver (Ex.III). Very soon thereafter
he was produced before Audeshwar Prasad Singh (P.W.19) with
the revolver in question. The further case of the
prosecution was that P.W. 19 seized that revolver; later
during investigation he seized the three cartridges said to
have been fired by Mohar Rai as well as a misfired
cartridge; the revolver as well as the seized cartridges
were sent to the ballistic expert for examination. These
facts were spoken to by the prosecution witnesses, in
particular by P.W. Janardhan Singh, the constable to whom
Mohar Rai was handed over immediately after the occurrence
and P.W. 19 the investigating officer. P.W. 19 deposed that
the number of the revolver seized is 545465. He is positive
that the revolver seized from Mohar Rai is Ex. 111, though
in his report to the ballistic expert he had given the
number of the revolver sent for examination as 545466, but
in that report itself he had added a note to say that the
last two digits were not clear,. The prosecution proceeded
on the basis-there is no ambiguity about it-that Ex. III
was the weapon that was used in the commission of the offen-
ce. The ballistic expert who was examined as D.W. 1 was
positive that the seized empties as well, as the misfired
cartridge could not have been fired from EX.III. The
evidence of this witness has been accepted both by the trial
court as well as by the High Court. From that it follows
that the prosecution case that Mohar Rai fired three shots
from Ex.III cannot be accepted as true. If this part of the
prosecution case fails then very little remains in the
prosecution case. The trial court and the High Court have
brushed aside this important aspect on a wholly untenable
basis. They opined that by some mistake a revolver
different from that seized from Mohar Rai might have been
sent to the ballistic expert. The conclusion has no basis
on the material on record. It is just a speculation -a
process not open to- courts. Evidently overwhelmed by the
evidence of the large number of )Witnesses who deposed in
favour of the prosecution case, forgetting the fact that
most of them belong to the faction opposed to the appel-
lants. the trial court and the High Court ignored the
probabilities and lost sight of the evidence afforded by the
circumstances appearing in the case. Both those courts
failed to realise that the fact that Ex. III was not the
revolver that was used during the
529
incident went to probablise the plea taken by Mohar Rai. At
this stage we may recall the fact that both the trial
Magistrate as well as the High Court rejected the
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prosecution case and acquitted Mohar Rai in the case against
him under s. 19(f) of the Arms Act. It is true that the
decision of the trial court in that case was rendered after
the Assistant Sessions Judge, Sasaram, convicted the
appellants in the present case and therefore it may be that
the appellants cannot take the benefit of the rule laid down
by this Court in Pritam Singh v. The State of Punjab(1) and
affirmed in Manipur Administration v. Thokchom, Bira
Singh(2). But even without the assistance of that rule, on
the basis of the prosecution evidence itself the prosecution
version stands discredited. Once it is proved that the
empties recovered from the scene could not have been fired
from Ex.III the prosecution case that those empties were
fired from Ex.III by Mohar Rai stands falsified.
The trial court as well as the High Court wholly ignored the
significance of the injuries found on the appellants. Mohar
Rai had sustained as many as 13 injuries and Bharath Rai 14.
We get it from the evidence of P.W. 15 that he noticed
injuries on the person of Mohar Rai when he was produced
before him immediately after the occurrence. Therefore the
version of the appellants that they sustained injuries at
the time of the occurrence is highly probabilised. Under
these circumstances the prosecution had a duty to explain
those injuries. The evidence of Dr. Bishun Prasad Sinha
(P.W. 18) clearly shows that those injuries could not have
been self-inflicted and further, according to him, it was
most unlikely that they would have been caused at the
instance of the appellants themselves. Under these
circumstances we are unable to agree with the High Court
that the prosecution had no duty to offer any explanation as
regards those injuries. In our judgment the failure of the
prosecution to offer any explanation in that regard shows
that evidence of the prosecution witnesses relating to the
incident is not true or at any rate not wholly true.
Further those injuries probabilise the plea taken by the
appellants.
Both the trial court as well as the High Court refused to
take into consideration the plea of the appellants on the
ground that that plea did not commend itself to the trial
Magistrate in the case instituted on the complaint of Mohar
Rai. They were erroneously of the view that the plea in
question was barred by the rule laid down by this Court in
Pritam Singh’s case(1). In that case, this Court accepted
as correct the following statement of
(1) A.I.R. 1956 S.C. 415.
(2) [1964] 7 S.C.R. 123
530
the law made by the Judicial Committee in Sambasivam v.
Public Prosecutor, Federation of Malaya():
"The effect of a verdict of acquittal
pronounced by a competent court on a lawful
charge and after a lawful trial is not
completely stated by saying that the person
acquitted cannot be tried again for the same
offence. To that it must be added that the
verdict is binding and conclusive in all
subsequent proceedings between the parties to
the adjudication. The maxim ’res judicata pro
vetitate accipitur’ is no less applicable to
criminal than to civil proceedings. Here, the
appellant having been acquitted at the first
trial on the charge of having ammunition in
his possession, the prosecution was bound to
accept the correctness of that verdict and was
precluded from taking any step to challenge it
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at the second trial."
Dixon J., of the Australian High Court in the King v.
Wilkes(2) explained the legal position in these words :
"Whilst there is not a great deal of authority
upon the subject, it appears to me that there
is nothing wrong in the view that there is an
issue-estoppel, if it appears by record of
itself or as explained by proper evidence,
that the same point was determined in favour
of a prisoner in a previous criminal trial
which is brought in issue on a second criminal
trial of the same prisoner. That seems to be
implied in the language used by Wright, J. in
R. v. Ollis [1960] II Q.B. 758, at p. 769)
which, in effect I, have adapted in the fore-
going statement...... There must be a prior
proceeding determined against the Crown
necessarily involving an issue which again
arises in a subsequent proceeding by the Crown
against the same prisoner. The allegation of
the Crown in the subsequent proceeding must
itself be inconsistent with the acquittal of
the prisoner in the previous proceeding. But
if such a condition of affairs arises I see no
reason why the ordinary rules of issue-
estoppel should not apply. Such rules are not
to be confused with those of res judicata,
which in criminal proceedings are expressed in
the pleas of autrefois acquit and autrefois
convict. They are pleas which are concerned
with the judicial determination of an alleged
criminal liability and in the case of
conviction with the substitution of a new
liability. Issue-estoppel is concerned with
the judicial establishment of a pro-
(1) [1950] A.C. 458.
(2) (77)C.L.R.511, at pp.518-519.
531
position of a law or fact between parties. It
depends upon well-known doctrines which
control the relitigation of issues which are
settled by prior litigation."
This Court endorsed that statement in Manipur Administra-
tion’s case(’). But the law laid down in those cases has no
application to the facts of the present case. In both the
prosecution-in the complaint made by Mohar Rai as well as in
tie complaint made by P.W. the prosecutor before the court
was the State. Therefore, the decision in the former case
cannot operate as an issue-estoppel against the appellants
in the present case, because they were not parties in the
former case. In other words the plea taken by the
appellants in this case was never before litigated between
them and the State, the opposite party in the present case.
All that can be said is that the case put forward by the
State in the one case is inconsistent with that put forward
by it in the other. In those circumstances it was wrong to
hold that the appellants were estopped from putting forward
their defence. That apart, it is doubtful-though for the
purpose of this case it is unnecessary to express any final
opinion on this point-whether the rule in question could be
pressed against an accused, the reason being that while a
prosecution cannot succeed unless it proved its case beyond
reasonable doubt, the nature of the proof required of an
accused in substantiating the plea taken by him is
different-it is sufficient if he proves that plea taken by
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him is reasonable and probable. In that event he-is
entitled to the benefit of doubt. This aspect was noticed
by this Court in Manipur Administration’s(1) case, where it
was observed:
"Before parting, we think it proper to make
one observation. The question has sometimes
been mooted as to whether the same principle
of issue-estoppel could be raised against an
accused, the argument against its application
being that the prosecution cannot succeed
unless it proved to the satisfaction of the
Court trying the accused by evidence led
before it that he is-guilty of the offence
charged. We prefer to express no opinion on
this question since it does not arise for
examination."
For the reasons mentioned above, we are satisfied that the
trial court as well as the High Court erred in summarily
rejecting the defence of the appellants on the sole ground
that the version put forward by them having been rejected by
the court in G.R. case 13761TR 20 of 61/63 in the court of
the Munsif-Magistrate I Class, Sasaram the same cannot be
again considered. We think that the defence of the
appellants is highly probabilised by
(1) [1964] 7 S.C.R. 123.
532
three important circumstances, namely-(i) the same was put
forward immediately after the occurrence, (ii) it
satisfactorily explains the injuries found on the persons,
of the appellants while the prosecution evidence fails to
explain those injuries,. and (iii) the prosecution evidence
itself shows that Mohar Rai could not have used Ex. III and
therefore his version that that weapon was thrust on him is
probablised.
The last contention taken by Mr. Garg is that admission of
Ex. 4, an inadmissible document, has greatly prejudiced the
case of the appellants. According to him, the admission of
that document is hit by S. 162 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure. In the alternative, he contended that that
document could not have been used to discredit the plea
taken by Mohar Rai,, We have earlier noted the two divergent
versions given by P.W.1 and Mohar Rai in respect of the
incident that took place on the evening of October 8, 1961.
Quite naturally, both these complaints were investigated
simultaneously. The statement given by P.W.1 was recorded
as first information in one case and the statement given by
Mohar Rai as first information in the other. Appellant
Bharath Rai was questioned during the investigation. His
statement is Ex. 4. The trial court came to the conclusion
that it was not hit by s. 162 as the same was not recorded
in the course of investigation in the case against Bharath
Rai. The High Court justified the admission of that
document on the basis of the rule laid down by this Court in
Faddi -V. State of Madhya Pradesh(’), namely-where the
person who lodged the first information report regarding one
offence is himself subsequently accused of that offence and
tried and the report lodged by him is not a confessional
first information report but is an admission by him of
certain facts which have a bearing on the question to be
determined by the Court, viz., how and by whom the offence
was committed or whether the statement of the accused in the
court denying the correctness of certain statements of the
prosecution witnesses is correct or not, the first
information report is admissible to prove against him, his
admissions which are relevant under S. 21 of the Evidence
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Act. It was contended on behalf of the appellants that
whether that statement is held to have been taken during the
investigation of the complaint made by P.W. 1 or during the
investigation of the complaint made by Mohar Rai, in either
case it is hit by S. 162 of the Code of Criminal Procedure’.
It was also urged that the rule laid down in Faddi’s case()
has no application to the facts of the present case, In the
instant case no portion of Ex. 4 was relied on as an
admission of Bharath Rai. Hence the rule laid down in
Faddi’s case(’) could not have been called into aid. The
trial court and the High Court relied on Bharath Rai’s
statement that it was Naulakh Rai who fired a pistol
(1) A.I.R. 1964 S.C. 1850.
523
to contradict the statement of Mohar Rai in his complaint
that a pistol was fired by Dudhnath. No portion of Ex. 4
could have been used for that purpose either under S. 157 or
s. 145 of the Evidence, Act. As Bharath Rai was not
examined as a witness in the present case his previous
statement could not have been used either to contradict his
evidence or corroborate it even if it is to be held that it
is a statement coming under s. 154 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure : see Nazir Ali v. State of U.P.(1).
The circumstances noticed above, in our opinion, not merely
affect the value and weight to be attached to the
prosecution evidence, but they persuade us to doubt the
prosecution version. In the circumstances, we are unable to
resist the conclusion that there has been a miscarriage of
justice.
We accordingly allow these appeals and acquit the
appellants.. Their bail bonds do stand cancelled.
R.K.P.S. Appeals allowed.
(1) A.I.R. 1957 S.C. 366.
524