Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SURAJDEO YADAV
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF BIHAR
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 12/04/1996
BENCH:
MUKHERJEE M.K. (J)
BENCH:
MUKHERJEE M.K. (J)
KURDUKAR S.P. (J)
CITATION:
JT 1996 (6) 54 1996 SCALE (3)438
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
M.K. MUKHERJEE, J.
Surajdeo Yadav, the appellant herein, and three others
were placed on trial before the Additional Sessions Judge,
Aurangabad to Answer a common charge under Section 302 IPC
read with Section 149 IPC. Against the appellant a separate
charge under Section 27 Of the Arms Act was also framed. The
trial ended with an order of conviction and sentence
recorded against the appellant under Sections 302 IPC and 27
of be Arms Act and of acquittal in favour of the others. As
the appeal presented by the appellant before the High Court
was dismissed he has filed the instant appeal, after
obtaining special leave.
According to the prosecution case, on December 31, 1977
at or about 6.30 P.M. when Shamsher Singh, (the deceased)
was sitting in the sehan of his house in village Jamhore,
within the police station of Aurangabad and gossiping with
Balmiki Sharma (PW 7), an employee of Magadh Gramin Bank, 5
or 6 persons suddenly came there and one of them, who was
carrying a double barrelled gun, fired at Shamsher Singh
twice resulting in his instantaneous death. Thereafter the
miscreants fled away. After their departure Bhupinder Singh
(PW 6), a cousin of Shamsher Singh, took the body to
Aurangabad Hospital where the police recorded his statement
and registered a case against unknown persons. In course of
the investigation six persons including the appellant were
arrested and placed in test identification parades wherein
the appellant was identified by Bhagwan Singh (PW 4),
Ramlakhan Kumar (PW S), Bhupinder Singh (PWS 6), Balmiki
Sharma (PW 7), Hari Singh (FW 8) and Others as the person
who fired at the deceased. On completion of investigation
police submitted charge sheet against all the six arrested.
However, before commitment of the case to the Court of
Session two of them died.
The appellant pleaded not guilty tc the charges
levelled against him and contended that he had been falsely
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implicated on mere suspicion. He further contended that he
was known to the witnesses who identified him as he had
studied in v school of Jamhore and, therefore, if really he
was one of the miscreants the eye-witnesses would have named
him.
To prove its case the prosecution relied upon the
evidence of Bhagwan Singh (PW 4), Ram Lakhan Kumar (PW 5),
Bhupinder Singh (PW 6), Balmiki Sharma (PW 7) and Hari Singh
(PW 8), all of whom gave ocular version of the incident and
identified the appellant as the person who was carrying a
double barrelled gun and fired at Shamsher Singh resulting
in his death. To corroborate their evidence of
identification in Court the prosecution examined Sri Vijay
Bahadur Singh (PW 3), the Magistrate who had held the test
identification parade. The appellant also, in his turn
examined three witnesses in Support of his plea.
From the judgment of the trial Court we find that it
has recorded a categorical finding that the defence did not
challenge the prosecution case, as delineate by the above
eye witnesses, so far as it sought to prove the place and
the manner in which Shamsher Singh met with his death. In
answering the moot question as to whether the four persons
arraigned before it were responsible for the above murder
the trial Court observed that there was practically no
evidence to connect three of them, namely, Bindeshwar Yadav,
Jagdish Yadav, Kameshwar Dusad with the crime. As regards
the appellant the trial Court held, for reasons detailed in
the judgment, that although all the five eye witnesses had
identified the appellant as the person who committed the
murder of Shamsher Singh and also identified him in the test
identification parade, none of them, except Balmiki Sharma
(PS 7), could be safely relied upon. In negativing the
contention of the appellant that he was known to he eye
witnesses from before as he had studied in a sch 31 in the
village in question, the trial Court held that the evidence
given in support thereof was unworthy of credit and further
held that even if the evidence adduced by the defence
witness in this regard was accepted still then it could not
be said that PW 7 knew him from before for he (PW 7) hailed
from the district of Gaya and came to the village Jamhore
only a few months before the incident. Besides, the trial
Court observed that it was not even suggested to PW 7 that
he was known to the appellant from before. With the above
findings the trial Judge passed the impugned order.
While concurring with the finding of the trial Court as
regards the credibility of PW 7, the High Court, however,
criticized it (the trial Court) for not accepting the
evidence of the other eye witnesses as, according to the
high Court, they were natural and probable witnesses and the
grounds put forth by the trial Court for disbelieving them
were not sound and reasonable.
Notwithstanding the concurrent finding of the learned
Courts below that the appellant is guilty of the charges
levelled against him we hate, for ourselves, perused the
relevant evidence to ascertain whether the findings can be
sustained or not as a grievance was raised on behalf of the
appellant before us - which we found to be a genuine one-
that the High Court, did not at all advert to the defence
case, much less, discuss the evidence adduced in support
thereof.
Coming first to the evidence of Balmiki Sharma (PW 7),
we get that only few months before the incident he joined
the Jamhore branch of Magadh Gramin Bank, the office of
which was located in the house of the deceased. He used to
reside in the same building as also the deceased. In
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detailing the incident he testified that in the evening of
December 31, 1977 when he was sitting in the sehan in front
of the house of Shamsher Singh and was talking to him, 6/7
miscreants came there According to PW 7 the deceased’s
cousin Bhupinder Singh (PW 6) was also sitting there while
his munim Ram Lakhan Kumar (PW 5) and two others were
sitting in the verandah of the house. He next stated that
one of the miscreants, who was wearing trousers and a jacket
and was armed with a double barrelled gun, fired two shots
at Shamsher Singh as a result of which he fell down dead. He
claimed to have recognized the miscreants in the electric
light which was then burning there. He identified the
appellant as the person who was wearing jacket and trousers
and had fired at Shamsher Singh with the gun which he was
carrying. He further stated that he had identified him in
the test identification parade held earlier. In cross
examination it was elicited from him that the person whom he
had seen wearing jacket and trousers was of slightly darker
complexion; and, he volunteered, that the appellant was of
such complexion. The only suggestions that were put to him
in cross examination which were denied by him - were that he
had wrongly identified the appellant because of the
influence deceased s family and that he was deposing
falsely. Keeping in view his evidence, which remained
unshaken in cross examination and the fact that being a
resident of the building, in the precincts of which the
incident took place, he was a natural and probable witness
we m-e of the opinion that both the learned Courts below
were fully justified in relying upon the same.
As regards the evidence adduced on behalf of the
appellant in his defence we find that the trial Court
discussed the same threadbare to conclude that it was wholly
unreliable. As already stated the principal reasons which
weighed with the trial Court for drawing such conclusion
were that it was not even suggested to PW 7 that he knew the
appellant from before, that, admittedly, PW 7 was a resident
of District Gaya and not of Aurangabad and that he came to
Jamhore only in the year 1977. In dealing with the evidence
of DW 2 who stated that the appellant had read in a primary
school of the village the trial Court observed that it could
not be accepted, firstly because admittedly he was a
professional witness, secondly because he had no occasion to
read or teach in that school, thirdly because he was not
competent to prove the entry in the school record, which
indicated that one Surajdeo Yadav was a student of the
school, and lastly because while it was suggested to PW 4
that Surajadeo Yadav read in a primary school, the entry in
question related to the middle school, and not the primary
school. Finally, the trial Court observed that even if it
was accepted that Surajdeo Yadav (the appellant) had read at
Jamhore middle school there was nothing to show that any of
the witnesees who have participated in the test
identification parade had ever read in the school with him.
Since each of the grounds canvassed by the trial Court for
discarding the evidence of the defence witnesses are cogent
and convincing we find no reason whatsoever to accept the
defence contention.
That brings us to the evidence of the other eye
witnesses which was rejected by the trial Court. On perusal
of the reasons put forward by the trial Court for such
rejection we are in complete agreement with the High Court
that none of them is sustainable. part from the fact that
the trial Court itself recorded a finding - which we have
mentioned earlier - that their evidence as to the manner in
which the incident took place remained unchallenged and
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uncontrovered, the clinching evidence of PW 7 clearly proves
that at least Bhupinder Singh (PW 6) and Ram Lathan Kumar
(PW 5) were sitting with him when the firing took place. In
such circumstances the trial Court ought not to have
rejected their evidence, more so when the rejection is
primarily on the basis that PW S being the munim of the
deceased was not an independent witness and PW 6, who lodged
the FIR, could not say the colour of the pant (trousers) the
appellant was wearing and that he was a relation of the
deceased. Be that a it may, this aspect of the matter need
not detain us as we are in complete agreement with both the
learned Courts below that the evidence of Balmiki Sharma (PW
7), who was a natural, probable and disinterested witness,
clearly establishes the guilt of the appellant.
The appeal is, therefore, dismissed. The appellant, who
is on bail, will now surrender to his bail bonds to serve
out the remainder of the sentence.