Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
HUKAM SINGH AND ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF RAJASTHAN
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 14/09/2000
BENCH:
K.T. THOMAS, J. & R.P. SETHI, J.
JUDGMENT:
THOMAS, J.
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The killers of an advocates clerk arranged a funeral
pyre by themselves and cremated the victim in the sight of
his bereaved widow and son. Police charge-sheeted six
persons including the appellants for those acts. But the
Sessions Court acquitted them all. As the High Court
reversed the order of acquittal as against the appellants
and convicted them for murder they filed this appeal as of
right under Section 379 of the Code of Criminal Procedure
(for short the Code). We heard detailed arguments of Shri
Uday Umesh Lalit, Advocate for the appellants and Ms.
Anjali Doshi, Advocate for the State of Rajasthan.
Munshi Singh was an advocates clerk who was murdered in
the vicinity of his own house by using a pistol and other
lethal weapons at about 7 P.M. on 29.6.1981. The
prosecution case is the following:
Appeallnt Hukam Singh (who was ranked as A.1 in the
trial court) and his brother Harnam Singh (A.5) and the
latters sons Jaswant Singh (A.2) and Balwant Singh (A.4)
had some axe to grind against deceased Munshi Singh. On the
evening of the fateful day Munshi Singh alighted from a bus
near his house and was proceeding to his house. His son
Bhupender Pal (PW.4) took over a bag of cattle-feed which
his father brought from the bazar and he too was walking a
little ahead of his father. All the appellants were at the
bus stop variously armed. On sighting the deceased one
among the appellants (Hukam Singh) made an exhortation to
finish him off and then Darshan Singh (who died before the
trial started) fired his pistol which hit the deceased on
his back. He slumped down on the spot.
Seeing the above mishap befallen his father PW.4
Bhupender Pal rushed to rescue him. Munshi Singhs wife on
hearing the commotion flew down from her house and reached
her husband. All the accused assaulted both of them as well
as the deceased. Then the assailants dragged the deceased
along the ground and brought him to their courtyard. They
made a pyre with firewood splinters and put the body of
Munshi Singh on it and set it ablaze while his wife and son
were looking on aghast.
The police was alerted and they reached the spot but to
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find only the burnt remaining of Munshi Singh and the
smouldering embers of the dying pyre. They extinguished the
flames and salvaged whatever remained on the corpse. A team
of doctors conducted post-mortem examination among whom PW.8
Dr. Rajendra Kumar gave evidence that the dead body reached
such a stage of burnt condition that it was impossible to
form an opinion regarding the cause of death. However, they
recovered a metallic substance from the skeleton which could
be the embedded remnant of firing the pistol.
Hukam Singh, when examined by the Sessions Judge under
Section 313 of the Code admitted that he killed the
deceased. But he advanced a contrary version like this: He
and Darshan Singh saw the deceased grappling Bharama Bai and
the lady was crying. Then Darshan Singh fired at the
molesting Minshi Singh. When his son Bhupender Pal (PW.4)
and his wife Ram Pyari(PW.5) reached the spot Hukam Singh
and his associates forcibly prevented them from removing
Munshi Singh from the spot. He also admitted that the dead
body of Munshi Singh was subsequently cremated by them.
Neither the Sessions Court nor the High Court found the
said version of Hukam Singh to be true. He did not care to
examine Bharama Bai nor make any attempt to substantiate the
version put forward by him. The courts therefore did not
attach any credence to the aforesaid belated version
put-forth by Hukam Singh at the fag end of the trial.
Bhupender Pal (PW.4) and Ram Pyari (PW.5) were the two
eyewitnesses examined by the prosecution. The fact that
they were present at the scene of occurrence could not be
disputed nor the same has been disputed by the accused.
They sustained injuries at the hands of the assailants and
the doctor who noted such injuries had testified about them
in the court as PW.9. The version spoken to by PW-4 in
court is substantially a reiteration of the version which he
supplied to the police as early as 8.40 P.M. on the same
night. That became the basis for the FIR. The Sessions
Court refused to believe the testimony of those witnesses on
the erroneous perception that they are interested
witnesses. The only premise for dubbing them as
interested witnesses is that they were the kith and kin of
the deceased. Why should such witnesses be termed as
interested witnesses? If they had seen the occurrence they
would certainly have the interest to bring the offenders of
the murder of their breadwinner to book. Normally the kith
and kin of the deceased, if they had seen the occurrence
would not absolve the real offenders and involve innocent
persons for that murder. [Vide Dalip Singh vs. State of
Punjab (1954 SCR 145), Guli Chand vs. State of Rajasthan
(1974 3 SCC 698) and Dalbir Kaur Vs. State of Punjab (1976
4 SCC 158)].
Be that as it may, the promptitude with which the First
Information Statement was lodged as done by PW.4 in this
case, give such an assurance that he would have told the
police the true version of the incident.
In the First Information Statement PW.4 mentioned that
one Inder Singh and one Budh Ram Nayak have also seen the
incident. The Investigating Officer included those two
persons as witnesses to the occurrence when the final report
was laid. But in the Sessions Court they were not examined
by the Public Prosecutor. The Sessions Judge frowned at the
prosecution for not examining those witnesses. The High
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Court noted that non-examination of those witnesses was due
to an application submitted by the Public Prosecutor that
those two witnesses did not support the prosecution version.
Regarding that aspect learned Judges of the High Court made
the following observations:
In our opinion, it is the discretion of the Public
Prosecutor to examine the witnesses, whom he likes. It is
not necessary for the prosecution to examine each and every
witness to prove a particular fact. When the Public
Prosecutor came to know that Inder Singh and Budh Ram would
not depose in favour of the prosecution, he was justified in
giving them up by moving an application in the court that
the witness had joined hands with the accused. There was
nothing wrong in the conduct of the Public Prosecutor. The
fact that the two witnesses have not been examined, does not
detract the testimony of Ram Pyari and Bhupender Pal.
Shri Uday Umesh Lalit, learned counsel for the
appellants made a criticism against the Public Prosecutor
for not examining those two witnesses, as they were the only
independent witnesses. Learned counsel contended that the
Public Prosecutor can not withhold the evidence of such
independent witnesses in a case of this nature as the
remaining witnesses were the close relatives of the deceased
person. The discretion of the Public Prosecutor in choosing
the witnesses for examination cannot include the freedom to
keep away such independent witnesses from being examined,
argued the counsel.
On the other hand, Ms. Anjali Doshi, learned counsel
who argued for the State, submitted that the Public
Prosecutor did not commit any impropriety in not examining
those two witnesses. When he learnt that those two
witnesses would speak against the prosecution version he
sidestepped them and it is the prerogative of the Public
Prosecutor not to examine such persons as prosecution
witnesses; it is open to the Public Prosecutor to report to
the court about his decision not to examine any person as
prosecution witnesses particularly when he got report
through his own sources that those witnesses were won over
by the accused, according to the learned counsel for the
State.
In trials before a Court of Sessions the prosecution
shall be conduced by a Public Prosecutor. Section 226 of
the Code enjoins on him to open up his case by describing
the charge brought against the accused. He has to state
what evidence he proposes to adduce for proving the guilt of
the accused. If he knew at that stage itself that certain
persons cited by the investigating agency as witnesses might
not support the prosecution case he is at liberty to state
before the court that fact. Alternatively, he can wait
further and obtain direct information about the version
which any particular witness might speak in court. If that
version is not in support of the prosecution case it would
be unreasonable to insist on the Public Prosecutor to
examine those persons as witnesses for prosecution.
When the case reaches the stage envisaged in Section 231
of the Code the Sessions Judge is obliged to take all such
evidence as may be produced in support of the prosecution.
It is clear from the said Section that the Public Prosecutor
is expected to produce evidence in support of the
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prosecution and not in derogation of the prosecution case.
At the said stage the Public Prosecutor would be in a
position to take a decision as to which among the persons
cited are to be examined. If there are too many witnesses
on the same point the Public Prosecutor is at liberty to
choose two or some among them alone so that the time of the
court can be saved from repetitious depositions on the same
factual aspects. That principle applies when there are too
many witnesses cited if they all had sustained injuries at
the occurrence. The Public Prosecutor in such cases is not
obliged to examine all the injured witnesses. If he is
satisfied by examining any two or three of them, it is open
to him to inform the court that he does not propose to
examine the remaining persons in that category. This will
help not only the prosecution for relieving itself of the
strain of adducing repetitive evidence on the same point but
also helps the court considerably in lessening the workload.
Time has come to make every effort possible to lessen the
workload, particularly those courts crammed with cases, but
without impairing the cause of justice.
The situation in a case where the prosecution cited two
categories of witnesses to the occurrence, one consisting of
persons closely related to the victim and the other
consisting of witnesses who have no such relation, the
Public Prosecutors duty to the court may require him to
produce witnesses from the latter category also subject to
his discretion to limit to one or two among them. But if
the Public Prosecutor got reliable information that any one
among that category would not support the prosecution
version he is free to state in court about that fact and
skip that witness being examined as a prosecution witness.
It is open to the defence to cite him and examine him as
defence witness. The decision in this regard has to be
taken by the Public Prosecutor in a fair manner. He can
interview the witness before hand to enable him to know well
in advance the stand which that particular person would be
adopting when examined as a witness in court.
A four Judge Bench of this Court has stated the above
legal position thirty five years ago in Masalti vs. State
of Uttar Pradesh [AIR 1965 SC 202]. It is contextually
apposite to extract the following observation of the Bench:
It is not unknown that where serious offences like the
present are committed and a large number of accused persons
are tried, attempts are made either to terrorise or win over
prosecution witnesses, and if the prosecutor honestly and
bona fide believes that some of his witnesses have been won
over, it would be unreasonable to insist that he must tender
such witnesses before the court.
The said decision was followed in Bava Hajee vs. State
of Kerala [AIR 1974 SC 902]. In Shivaji Sahabrao Bobade vs.
State of Maharashtra [1973 (2) SCC 793], Krishna Iyer J.,
speaking for a three Judge Bench had struck a note of
caution that while a Public Prosecutor has the freedom to
pick and choose witnesses he should be fair to the Court
and to the truth. This court reiterated the same position
in Dalbir Kaur vs. State of Punjab [(1976) 4 SCC 158].
Sri Uday Umesh Lalit alternatively contended that even
if Hukam Singh and Darshan Singh are found responsible for
the murder of Munshi Singh that would not warrant any need
to tag the remaining appellants with the murder of the
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deceased by means of either Section 149 or Section 34 of the
IPC. According to the learned counsel, if the acts
attributed to them (that they dragged the deceased up to
their chowk and put his body on the pyre and set him ablaze)
are true, the offence of which they are liable to be
convicted cannot escalate beyond Section 201 IPC.
We bestowed serious consideration to the above
contention. If the evidence of PW4 Bhupender Pal and PW.5
Ram Pyare is believable the role played by each of the
appellants can be discerned with reasonable degree of
certainty. It is not as minor as sought to be dubbed by the
learned counsel. Starting with their convergence at the bus
stop, presumably waiting for the return of the deceased
after his days work, the fact that all were variously
armed, the fact that they all joined together in inflicting
blows on the fallen victim and also on his wife and son who
rushed to the rescue of their bread-winner, and the fact
that they all jointly dragged the deceased up to the pyre
and set him ablaze are very material in deciding whether
they all had the common object of liquidating the deceased
on that very evening.
On a scrutiny of the evidence and consideration of the
arguments seriously pressed into the service by the learned
counsel we have no reason to dissent from the finding
arrived by the Division Bench of the High Court that all the
appellants are liable to be convicted of the offences found
against them. We, therefore, affirm the conviction and
sentence passed on them and dismiss this appeal.