Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MAQSOODAN & OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF UTTAR PRADESH [AND VICE-VERSA]
DATE OF JUDGMENT15/12/1982
BENCH:
ISLAM, BAHARUL (J)
BENCH:
ISLAM, BAHARUL (J)
DESAI, D.A.
ERADI, V. BALAKRISHNA (J)
CITATION:
1983 AIR 126 1983 SCR (2) 45
1983 SCC (1) 218 1982 SCALE (2)1351
ACT:
Penal Code-Common intention-How determined.
Evidence Act-Dying declaration-Person making the
statement not dead and deposed in Court-Statement if could
be called dying declaration-Such statement if admissible
under section 32-Not quantum of evidence but quality
relevant.
HEADNOTE:
The prosecution case against the 12 accused persons was
that, armed with deadly weapons, they waylaid and assaulted
the deceased and three others accompanying him, and that
someone among another group of 12 of their associates
standing at some distance constantly incited the accused
with the words "kill, kill". The deceased received serious
injuries and died on the following morning.
While the appellant was convicted under s. 302 Indian
Penal Code and sentenced to death, ten other accused were
convicted and sentenced variously. One of them was
acquitted.
On appeal the High Court reduced the sentence of death
passed on the appellant to imprisonment for life.
Convictions of four of the 11 accused were altered from
under s. 302/149 and s. 307/149 to one under ss. 302/34 and
307/34 I.P.C. All of them were however acquitted of the
offences under s. 147 or s. 148 I.P.C. The convictions and
sentences against the other six accused were set aside and
they were acquitted.
It was contended on behalf of the appellants that their
conviction was unsustainable in law because the evidence of
the eye witnesses, who were interested parties, could not be
safely relied upon.
Dismissing the appeal,
^
HELD: The High Court erred in stating that the
testimony of the four eye witnesses suffered from numerous
infirmities, that they made improvements in their testimony
and that there were variations in their earlier and later
statements. On that count alone their testimony could not be
held to be infirm. It is the duty of the Court to remove the
grain from the chaff. [49 C-D]
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The parties were inimical for a long time. The four
witnesses were the injured persons and therefore, their
presence at the time and place of occurrence could not be
doubted. The presence of all the four accused in the scene
of occurrence and their participation in the crime had been
proved beyond reasonable doubt despite the improvements and
variations in the evidence of witnesses. [49 E-F]
In a case of this kind it is not the number of
witnesses examined or the quantity of evidence adduced by
the prosecution that counts. It is the quality that counts.
Eye witnesses, examined in the case were the best and
natural witnesses. The accused persons were known to the
witnesses and they did not have any reason to omit the real
culprits and implicate falsely accused persons. [49 G-H; 50
C]
A statement, written or verbal, of relevant facts made
by a person who is dead, is called a dying declaration and
is admissible in evidence under s. 32 of the Evidence Act.
But when a person who has made a statement, even if it be in
expectation of death but is not dead, it is not a dying
declaration. It is not admissible under s. 32 of the
Evidence Act.
[50 E-F]
In the instant case the two witnesses whose statements
were erroneously called dying declarations by the High Court
were alive and deposed in the case. Such statements are
admissible under s. 157 of the Evidence Act as former
statements made by them to corroborate their testimony in
the Court.
[50 F-G]
Common intention is a question of fact and is
subjective. It can be inferred from facts and circumstances.
In the instant case the appellants who were related to one
another were armed with deadly weapons when they waylaid and
attacked the deceased and his companions, someone incited
them to "kill", and after the assault they left the scene of
occurrence together and they were arrested from the same
place. There was the therefore common intention and the High
Court was justified in convicting them under s. 302/34, IPC.
[52 A-C]
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No.
175 of 1974.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order
dated the 18th October, 1973 of the Allahabad High Court in
Crl. Appeal Nos. 1307 and 1966 of 1973.
AND
Criminal Appeal Nos. 367-369 of 1974.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment and order
dated the 18th October, 1973 of the Allahabad High Court in
Criminal Appeal No. 1307 of 1973 connected with Crl. Appeal
Nos. 1287 and 1566 of 1973.
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Rajendra Singh, R.K. Garg B.P. Singh and Ranjit Kumar
for the Appellant.
O.P. Rana and M.V. Goswami for the Complainant.
Dalveer Bhandari for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
BAHARUL ISLAM, J. These four Criminal Appeals are by
special leave. Criminal Appeal No. 175 of 1974 is by the
four appellants-Maqsoodan, Madan Mohan, Prayagnath and Nando
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who have been convicted under Sections 302/34 and 307/34
Penal Code.
2. The material facts may be briefly stated as follows:
On 8 6.1972 at about 5.45 or 600 a.m, when Sulley (P.W.
1) along with his brother, Jadon (deceased), his son,
Rajendra (C.W. 1) and his nephew Vijay Kumar (P.W. 3) were
going from their house in Neem Gali, Mathura, to their
Dharamshala in Mohalla Bengali Ghat, via Vishram Ghat and
reached the area called Shyam Ghat, they were waylaid by the
twelve persons accused in the case and were assaulted.
According to the prosecution, the accused persons were
variously armed with Ballams, phrases and lathis. Another
group of twelve or thirteen persons who were associates of
the accused was standing at Vishram Ghat and some one was
constantly inciting the accused persons with the expression,
"kill, kill" whereupon the accused persons attacked and
assaulted Jadon, Vijay Kumar, Rajendra and Sulley. Jadon and
P.W. 3 were severely injured. The condition of Jadon was
very precarious. After the assault, the miscreants left.
P.W. 1 arranged for a lorry belonging to one Vishnu Chaubey
and carried the injured persons to the District Hospital.
The driver of the lorry was one Than Singh. Jadon and P.W. 3
were removed to the operation theatre. Thereafter, P.W. 1
proceeded to the Police Station, Kotwali at Mathura and
submitted a written First Information Report (FIR) about the
incident. The FIR was written by his nephew, Prakash Chandra
Chaturvedi (P.W. 8). The FIR was lodged at 6.30 a.m. at the
Police Station and has been proved in this case as Ex. "Ka-
16". After lodging the FIR, P.W. 1 came back to the hospital
where the injuries of all the four injured persons were
examined by Dr. B.S. Babbar. As the condition of the injured
persons was serious, intimation was sent to Shri U.C.
Tripathi (D.W. 7), Sub-Divisional
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Magistrate, Sahabad, for recording their statements. The
Magistrate came and recorded the statements of P.W. 3 and
C.W. 1 at 9.15 a.m. and 9.20 a.m. respectively. Jadon was
operated upon and his condition was such that he could not
make any statement. In fact, he succumbed to the injuries
the next day, namely, 9.6.1972 at 3.25 p.m. The post-mortem
examination was conducted on the dead body of Jadon by Dr.
B.S. Babbar on 10.6.1972 at 10.00 a.m.
3. The police after investigation submitted charge-
sheet against the twelve accused persons, all of whom
pleaded not guilty. The First Additional Sessions Judge,
Mathura, who tried the case, convicted eleven out of the
twelve accused persons and acquitted accused No. 12,
Kanhaiya. Appellant Maqsoodan was convicted under Section
302 I.P.C. and sentenced to death. The other ten accused
persons were convicted under Sections 302/149 and 307/149
I.P.C. and sentenced to imprisonment for life, each under
Section 302/149 Penal Code. Accused Parmatma was convicted
under Section 147 I.P.C. and the rest were convicted under
Section 148 I.P.C. They were sentenced to various terms of
imprisonment. The sentences of imprisonment were directed to
run concurrently. There was also a reference for the
confirmation of the death sentence imposed on Maqsoodan.
4. The convicts filed several appeals before the High
Court of Allahabad. The High Court altered the convictions
of Maqsoodan, Madan Mohan, Prayagnath and Nando, from under
Sections 302/149 and 307/149 to ones under Sections 302/34
and 307/34 Penal Code. The sentence of death imposed on
Maqsoodan was reduced to imprisonment for life. All of them
were acquitted of the offences under Section 147 or Section
148 I.P.C. The convictions and sentences as against the
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other six accused persons were set aside and they were
acquitted. The acquittal of Kanahaiya was affirmed. Criminal
Appeals No. 367, 368 and 369 of 1974 have been filed by the
State against the acquittal of the eleven accused persons of
the offences under Sections 147 and 148, Penal Code; S.L.P.
No. 766 of 1974 is by the State against the acquittal of
Kanahaiya.
5. All these appeals will be disposed of by this common
judgment.
6. Shri Rajendra Singh, learned counsel appearing for
the appellants in Criminal Appeal No. 175 of 1974, first
submits that
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the conviction of the four appellants is unsustainable in
law; he submits that the evidence of the four witnesses,
namely, P.W. 1, Sulley, C.W. 1, Rajendra, P.W. 3, Vijay
Kumar and P.W. 2, Jagdish, cannot form the basis of the
conviction as only one witness, namely, P.W. 2, Jagdish, out
of five witnesses named in the FIR has been examined; the
eye-witnesses examined are interested and their evidence
cannot be safely relied on.
The High Court has found that the testimony of the eye
witnesses, namely, P.Ws 1, 2, 3 and C.W. 1 "suffer from
numerous infirmities". It, therefore, sought support to
their testimony from the two earlier statements erroneously
called dying declarations, Exhibits Ka 22 and Ka 23 made by
P.W. 3 Vijai Kumar and P.W. 2 Jagdish respectively. The
infirmities referred to by the High Court consisted in,
according to the High Court, improvements made by the
witnesses and variations in their earlier and latter
statements. In our opinion, on that ground alone, the
testimony of P.Ws. 1, 2, 3 and C.W. 1 cannot be held to be
infirm. It is the duty of the court to remove the grain from
the chaff. These four witnesses are the injured witnesses
having received the injuries during the course of the
incident. Their presence at the time and place of the
occurrence cannot be doubted; in fact it has not been
challenged by the defence. As both the parties were inimical
for a long time, it will be prudent to convict only those
persons whose presence and participation in the occurrence
have been proved by the prosecution beyond reasonable doubt.
We agree with the finding of the High Court that the
presence and participation of appellants Maqsoodan, Madan
Mohan, Prayagnath and Nando, who are appellants in Criminal
Appeal No. 175 of 1974 has been proved beyond reasonable
doubt, despite the improvements and variations in their
evidence.
Shri Rajender Singh has submitted that it is not safe
to rely on the testimony of P.Ws. 1, 2, 3 and C.W. 1 as the
prosecution has not examined all the witnesses named in the
FIR except Jagdish, nor has the prosecution examined any of
the neighbours. It is not the number of witnesses examined
nor the quantity of evidence adduced by the prosecution that
counts. It is the quality that counts. Learned counsel has
not pointed out to us that any witness better or more
creditable has been omitted by the prosecution. As stated
above, the eye witnesses examined in this case were the best
and natural witnesses. Learned counsel also has criticized
that during the course of evidence, prosecution alleged that
Maqsoodan
50
gave two blows but that fact was not mentioned in the FIR.
He has also criticised that the injured witnesses do not say
who injured whom. This, on the contrary, shows that the
witnesses examined were not tutored and they gave no parrot
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like stereotyped evidence. It may be remembered that P.W. 1
who lodged the FIR received as many as seven incised wounds,
one of them being on the left chest; he took Jadon, who had
received sd serious injuries and who later on succumbed lo
them, and C.W. 1, who received five incised injuries and
P.W. 3, who has also seriously injured, to the hospital. He
lodged the FIR thereafter. The condition of his mind and
disposition can easily be imagined. There were bound to be
some errors in the FIR. It may also be remembered that the
FIR was lodged within half an hour of the occurrence. There
was little time lost. The occurrence took place at about
6.00 a.m. on 8.6.1972 It is nobody’s case that the witnesses
were unable to recognise the real culprits. The accused
persons were well-known to the witnesses from before. They
did not have any reason to omit the real culprits and
implicate falsely the accused persons. The evidence of P.Ws.
1, 2, 3 and C.W.1 could have been accepted even without
corroboration. Even so, the High Court rightly pressed into
service the earlier statements of P.W. 3 and C.W.1 (Ex. Ka-
22 and Ka-23) respectively.
7. Exts. Ka-22 and Ka-23 have been wrongly called dying
declarations. The statement written or verbal, of relevant
facts made by a person who is dead, is called a dying
declaration; it is relevant under Section 32 of the Evidence
Act, when the statement is made by the person as to the
cause of his death, or as to any of the circumstances of the
transaction which resulted in his death, in case, in which
that person’s death comes into question.
When a person who has made a Statement, may be in
expectation of death, is not dead, it is not a dying
declaration and is not admissible under Section 32 of the
Evidence Act. In the instant case, the makers of the
statements Ex. Ka-22 and Ka-23, are not only alive but they
deposed in the case. Their statements, therefore,, are not
admissible under Section 32; but their statements however
are admissible under Section 157 of the Evidence Act as
former statements made by them in order to corroborate their
testimony in the Court. In the instant case, Ex. Ka-22 and
Ka-23 respectively corroborate the testimony in Court of
P.W. 3 and C.W. 1 respectively.
8. The High Court has found that the witness later on
improved the story and roped in some other persons. As a
rule of
51
caution, the High Court has found that the participation of
the four appellants in the offence has been proved beyond
reasonable doubt and the presence and participation of the
other eight accused persons named by them have not been
proved beyond doubt. We do not find valid reason to
interfere with this finding of fact of the High Court, in
these appeals under Article 136 of the Constitution.
9. As the number of accused persons present and
participating in the occurrence have not been proved to be
five or more, the High Court has rightly held that the
common object necessary for constituting an unlawful
assembly has not been proved, and therefore in the facts and
circumstances of the case, the High Court correctly held
that common intention has not been proved and as such the
four appellants were rightly acquitted of the offence under
section 302 read with section 149 I.P.C., and also rightly
acquitted all the other accused persons of the offences
under Sections 147 and 148 I.P.C.
10. Shri Rajinder Singh next submits that if any
offence at all has been committed by the appellants of
Criminal Appeal No. 175 of 1974, the offences may be under
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Section 326 I.P.C. depending on the medical evidence and
circumstances of the case and that Section 34 I.P.C. cannot
apply as no common intention has been proved. We cannot
accept this submission. Dr. B.S. Babbar, P.W . 3, who held
the post-mortem examination on the dead body of Jadon found
a number of wounds out of which the following were serious:
1. Incised wound 2" x 1/4" x scalp deep on head.
2. Incised wound 3" x 1/4" x scalp deep on the head
3. Stiched wound with draining tube 3" towards upper
portion of the stomach on right side.
4. Stiched wound 1.1/2" on the upper portion of the
left side of the stomach.
In his opinion, death was due to cyncope following
shock and Haemorrhage as a result of the injuries. According
to him, injuries No. 1 & 2 separately was sufficient to
cause death in the ordinary course of nature. It, therefore,
cannot be argued that the offence committed was not murder.
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Common intention is a question of fact. It is
subjective. But it can be inferred from facts and
circumstances. In this case, the appellants were related.
All of them were armed with deadly weapons. They were
together. There was an order by some one, "kill, kill", when
all of them simultaneously attacked the deceased and P.Ws.
1, 2, 3, and C.W. 1. After the occurrence, they left
together; they were later arrested from the same place. The
High Court therefore rightly held that the appellants caused
the injuries with the common intention, and was justified in
convicting the appellants under Section 302/34 of the Penal
Code. We, therefore, affirm the conviction and sentences
inflicted by the High Court on Maqsoodan, Madan Mohan,
Prayagnath and Nando, appellants in Criminal Appeal No. 175
of 1974 and dismiss the appeal.
11. As held above that the High Court rightly held that
the prosecution failed to prove the common object and
therefore it rightly acquitted all the accused persons of
the offences under Sections 147 and 148.
12. In the result, the State appeals are also
dismissed.
P. B. R. Appeal dismissed.
53