Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BHARAT SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF UTTAR PRADESH
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 17/12/1998
BENCH:
G.B.PATTABAIK, M.B.SHAH
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
PATTANAIK.J.
These two appeals are directed against the Judgment
and Order 30th January, 1997 of Allahabad High Court arising
out Sessions Trial No. 213 of 1978 before the Sessions
Judge, Manipuri. Five appellants were tried for offenccs
under Section 302/149 and Section 148 IPC on the allegation
that all of them came armed and surrounded the deccased Jai
Dayal Singh, while he was busy with cultivation work on
15.10.77 at 1.00 P.M. and opened fire at him. On account
of such firing the deccased died. The further prosecution
case is that on account of previous rivalry between the
parties the decased had been given police guards and those
police guards arrived at the scene of occurrence and even
chased the assailants and fired at them but all the
assailants escaped. While the deceased was on the field,
PWI Jai Prakash and PW2 Satyapal Singh were also there but
they ran for their lives to a certain distance and came to
the place of occurrence only after the assailants left the
place. Jai Prakash PW1 gave a written report at the Police
Station at 3.05 P.M. which was treated as FIR and the
police then started investigation. After completion of
investigation charge-sheet was submitted and on being
committed the appellants stood their trail. The learned
Sessions Judge relying upon the evidence of the two eye
witnesses PW1 and PW2, came to the conclusion that the
appellants formed an unlawful assembly and started
indiscriminately firing at the deceased, as a result of
which, the deceased died. Consequently, the Sessions Judge
convicted the appellants for the offences as already stated.
On appeal, the High Court also re-appreciated the evidence
of the two eye witnesses and agreed with the conclusion of
the learned Sessions Judge that the witnesses are
trust-worthy and reliable and, therefore, the conviction of
the appellants on the
basis of those two witnesses was upheld. Since the
conviction of the appellants is based upon the evidence of
the aforesaid two eye witnesses, Mr. U.R.Lalit, the learned
Senior Counsel, appearing for the appellant’s contended that
the said two eye witnesses admittedly being enemical towares
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the accused persons, they cannot be hold to be fully
reliable witnesses and therefore corroboration from the
independent sources, thouth was available the same not
having been made available in Court, the prosecution case
must be held to have been vitiated. According to Mr. Lalit,
the police guards having reached the seene of occurrence
while the accused persons were there and the prosecution
evidence being that the police guards chased the accused
persons and there was an exchange of fire, non-examination
of those police guards must be construed to be an infirmity
which impeaches the reliability of the two enemical eye
witnesses PW1 and 2. Mr. Lalit also contended that the
occurrence having taken place at 1.00 P.M. in broad day
light in an open field and very near the Village Basti,
normally one would expect several villagers as witnesses and
non-availability of such witnesses must be viewed with
suspiction. Mr.Lalit also further argued that the
investigation in the case has not been made in a fair manner
and the true story has not been placed before the Court, as
a result of which the conclusion becomes irresistible that
the genesis of the case and the manner in which the deceased
met his death is not coming forth before the Corut and
therefore the accused is entitled to benifit of doubt.
According to Mr.Lalit, the fact that only three cartridges
were found, two of which from 12 bore gun and one from
riffle, the prosccution case that all the appellants started
indiscriminately firi ng at the deceased cannot be accepted.
Learned counsel also pointed out some intrinsic
inconsistency between the evidence of the witnesses of PWs1
& 2 and contended that the evidence of such witnesses cannot
from the basis of conviction in a charge of murder,
particularly when they had poistive animosity against the
accused persons.
In view of the contentions raised by the learned
counsel, we have carefully scrutinised the evidence of the
two eye witnesses PW1 & 2. On going through the same, we do
not find any intrinsie inconsistency or contradiction
between them, so far as the basic prosccution case is
concerned. It is apparent that all three of them namely the
deceases and PWs 1 & 2 went to the field together and were
doing agricultural operation when these accused persons came
in a group being armed and started firing. The two witnesses
left ht efield to save their lives but could scc the
occurrence from the nearby field keeping themselves hidden
but the deceased could not urn away and was made a vietim of
the brutal action of the appellants. That the deceased had
died of gun-shot injury is castablished through the evidence
of doctor who had conducted the post-mortem examination on
the dead body of the deceased. The so-called minor
inconsistency int he evidence of the two witnesses pointed
out to us by Mr. Lalit, in out view, do not detract the
intrinsic worth of the evidence of the two witnesses so as
to dub them as unrcliable. On the other hand, a reading of
the evidence of these two witnesses makes it crystal clear
that they were on the field along with the deceased and they
did scc the occurrence as narrated by them. It is tru that
the poilce guards who had been costed to provide sccurity
for the deceased on account of previous rivalry between the
parties chased the accused persons as told by PWs 1 & @ and
if any of them would have been examined they would have
unfolded the fact of their chasing the accused persons and
escape of the accused persons. But by the time they reached
the scene of occurrence, the accused had already shot at the
deceased and have tried to escape from the place. On going
through the materials on record, it is difficult for us to
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come to the conclusion that the police people have seenthe
fact of the accused appellants, shooting at the deceased and
therefore, non-examination of such police guards who cannot
be termed as eye witness to the occurrence with not be fatal
to the prosecution. Mr. Lalit, in course of his arguments
had also pointed out from the evidence of the doctor that
the fact that there has been no scorching, blackeming and
tattoing injury on the body of the deccased is because of te
the fact that shooting has not been from a close range and
therefore, the coiceincc of eye witnesses cannot be hold to
But in the absence of any positive opinion from the doctor
and in the absence of the exacl distance from which the
accused persons started shooting at the deceased, it is not
possible to accept this contention of the learned counsel
for the appellants. The evidence of eye witnesses have been
scrutinised by the learned Sessins Judge as well as by the
High Court in appeal and both the courts have relied upon
the same. Ordinarily, therefore, this court would not have
re-appreciated the evidence unless any glaring defect is
pointed out. But in view of the arguments advanced by the
learned counsel for the appellants, we have also thoroughly
scrutinised the evidence of the two witnesses for finding
out whether there is any justification for not relying upon
the testimony of those two witnesses. But we do not and
anything in their evidence so as to discard then from
consideration. In our considered opinion the courts below
rightly relied upon the evidence of the aforesaid two
witnesses in basing the conviction of the appellants. We
agree with the conclusion arrived at and hold that the
prosccution case has been proved beyond reasonable doubt. We
therefore do not find any merit in these appeals, which are
accordingly dismissed.