Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KIKAR SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF RAJASTHAN
DATE OF JUDGMENT12/05/1993
BENCH:
RAMASWAMY, K.
BENCH:
RAMASWAMY, K.
ANAND, A.S. (J)
CITATION:
1993 AIR 2426 1993 SCR (3) 696
1993 SCC (4) 238 JT 1993 (3) 508
1993 SCALE (2)917
ACT:
Indian Penal Code, 1860: S. 300 cl. ’thirdly,’ Exception 4-
Ingredients: Accused-Dangerously armed-Caused fatal blows on
unharmed man, during an altercation-Injury sufficient to
cause death in-ordinary course of nature-Held, accused took
undue advantage and acted cruelly-Exception 4 not
applicable-Offence is one of murder-Conviction and sentence
tinder s. 302 awarded by trial court maintained.
HEADNOTE:
The accused-appellant was prosecuted for the offence of
murder.
The prosecution case was that during an altercation between
the accused and his neighbour the former inflicted a blow
with a Kassi (spade) on the head of the latter who fell
down; and thereafter the accused inflicted two more injuries
on the victim; out of the three injuries the third one
afflicted on the neck of the deceased was, according to the
postmortem report, sufficient to cause death in the ordinary
course of nature.
The trial court convicted the accused for the offence of
murder and sentenced him to imprisonment for life under s.
302 I.P.C. The High Court confirmed the conviction and the
sentence.
In appeal to this Court, it was contended on behalf of the
accused that the case fell under Exception 4 to s. 300 IPC
inasmuch as the accused committed the offence on the spur of
moment and inflicted the injuries during the quarrel in the
heat of passion without any premeditation and he had no
intention to cause particular injuries.
Dismissing the appeal, this Court,
HELD:1. The offence committed by the accused is one of
murder and the trial court rightly convicted and sentenced
him to imprisonment for life under s. 302 IPC. (703-D)
697
2. Culpable homicide by intentionally causing bodily injury
which is found to be sufficient in the ordinary course of
nature to cause death attracts clause ’thirdly’ of s. 300
I.P.C. It would be murder unless it is brought in any one of
the exceptions. (700-E)
3.1 For application of Exception 4 to s. 300 I.P.C. all the
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conditions enumerated therein must he satisfied: the act
must. be committed without premeditation in a sudden fight
in the heat of passion, upon a sudden quarrel, without the
offender’s having taken undue advantage, and the accused had
not acted in a cruel or unusual manner. (701 A, 700-H)
3.2 The accused used deadly weapon against the unarmed man
and struck him a blow on the head. He had taken undue
advantage He did not stop with the first blow, he inflicted
two more blows on the fallen man and the third one proved to
be fatal. He acted crudely with no justification. By his
conduct the appellant denied himself of the benefit of
Exception 4 to s. 300 I.P.C. (702C)
Panduranga Narayan Jawalekar v. State of Maharashtra :
[1979] 1 SCC 132, relied on.
4.1 It is not necessary that death must be inevitable or in
all circumstances the injury inflicted must cause death. If
the probability of death is very great the requirement of
clause third of s. 300 I.P.C. is satisfied. If there is
probability in a lesser degree of death ensuing from the act
committed the finding should be of culpable homicide not
amounting to murder. The emphasis is on sufficiency of
injury to cause death. The Judge must always try to find
whether the bodily injury inflicted was that which the
accused intended to inflict. The intention must he gathered
from a careful examination of all the fact-. and
circumstances in a given case. The citus at which the
injury was inflicted, nature of the injury, weapon used,
force with which it was used are all relevant facts. (703-B-
C)
4.2 The accused inflicted fatal blow, i.e., third injury
severing the neck after the deceased had fallen on the
ground due to impact of the first injury on parietal region.
The third injury is proved to be sufficient in the ordinary
course of nature to cause death. Even otherwise death is
inevitable. When the appellant inflicted two injuries on a
fallen man, he necessarily intended to inflict those two
injuries, though the first injury may be assumed to have
been inflicted during the course of altercation. (702-E-F)
698
Virsa Singh v. State of Punjab: AIR 1958 SC, 465 and Rajwant
Singh v. State of Kerala: AIR 1966 SC 1844, relied on.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 437 of
1993.
From the Judgment and Order dated 12.9.1990 of the Rajasthan
High Court in D.B. Criminal Appeal No. 185 of 1984.
C.V., Rappai, Amicus curiae for the Appellant.
Aruneshwar Gupta for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
K. RAMASWAMY, J. Special leave granted.
The appellant was convicted under s. 302 I.P.C. and
sentenced to undergo imprisonment for life for causing the
death of Jeet Singh on May 22, 1983 at about 11,00 a.m. in
the field of the deceased. The Rajasthan High Court
confirmed the conviction in Criminal Appeal No. 105 of 1984.
The case of the prosecution in nutshell was that the
deceased and the appellant are neighbouring owners of lands.
There was an altercation between them due to the appellant
throwing soil into the lands of the deceased from ’Dali’
(strip of land dividing the two fields of the deceased and
the appellant). Thereon the deceased went to the appellant
to persuade him not to throw the soil into their field and
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to have the matter settled amicably through negotiations and
if need be by measuring the lands, yet the appellant was
annoyed with the conduct of the deceased and his sons PW- 1
and PW-2 and son-in-law PW-3. At the instigation of his son
by name Pappu (who was a juvenile offender and was dealt
with separately), the appellant inflicted with Kassi (spade,
sharp edged cutting instrument) on the head of the deceased
and with its impact the deceased fell down. Thereafter the
appellant inflected two more injuries. When PW- 1 to 3
raised alarm, the accused ran away. PWs- 1 to 3 went near
Jeet Singh and found him dead with bleeding injuries on
head, neck and back.PW-1 went and lodge at the police
station the report Ex. P-1 narrating the entire prosecution
case. At the trial PWs- 1 to 3 were examined as direct
witnesses whose evidence was believed by both the courts
below as natural witnesses and the appellant was convicted
for the offence of murder. We found no infirmity in the
699
assessment of the evidence, though the counsel for the
appellant attempted to argue the case in that behalf.
However, notice was issued to the State oil the nature of
the offence and the State has appeared.
We have heard the counsel on both sides. During post-mortem
the doctor found the following thee injuries on the dead
body
1. Incised wound 11 cm x 2-1/2 cm x 5 cm on
the right pariete occipital area. Bone
fractured ura matter was seen from the wound.
2. Incised wound 15 cm x 6 cm x 5 cmon the
right scapular area bone fractured.
3. Incised wound 13 cm x 10 cm x 12 cm on the
right side of neck. All vessels of the right
side neck were cut cervical vertebrae 4 and 5
along with the spinal cord was cut through and
Larynx and right side of mandible cut.
The witnesses have stated that when the appellant caused the
first injury on the head, the deceased fell down and
thereafter the appellant inflicted the other two injuries
while the deceased was lying on the ground. The incised
injury on the parieto occipital region was the first injury.
The doctor found that by the third injury on the right side
of the neck, the vessels on the right side of the neck, were
completely cut, cervical vertebra along with spinal cord
were cut through larynx and also right side of mandible.
According to him, the third injury was sufficient to cause
death in the ordinary course of nature.
The contention of the learned counsel is that the appellant
committed the offence on the spur of moment when quarrel
ensued between the appellant and the deceased, when the
appellant was prevented to spread the soil in his field. So
in heat of passion and on the spur of moment without
premeditation the appellant inflicted injuries on the
deceased. He had no intention to cause-particular injuries,
thou oh later on proved to be fatal. Since he had no
intention to cause such injury as is likely to cause the
death and there was no premeditation, nor intention to kill,
the case would fall under Exception (4) to s. 300 I.P.C.
Even otherwise no offence of murder has been made out.
Therefore, it is only culpable homicide not amounting to
murder punishable under s. 3(A Part 11 I.P.C. Having given
our anxious consideration and the facts and circumstances do
indicate that there are no merits in either contentions.
Even if we assume that the appellant committed
700
the offence during the course of a verbal quarrel between
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the appellant and the deceased one cannot escape from the
conclusion that the offence is one of murder.
Section 299 I.P.C. defines that whoever causes death by
doing an act with the intention of causing death, or with
the intention of causing such bodily injury as is likely to
cause death, or with the knowledge that he is likely by such
act to cause death, commits the offence of culpable
homicide. Under s.,300 except in the cases hereinafter
excepted, culpable homicide is murder........ thirdly if it
is done with the intention of causing bodily injury to any
person and the bodily injury intended to be inflicted is
sufficient in the ordinary course of nature to cause death.
Exception 4 thereof provides that culpable homicide is not
murder if it is committed without premeditation in a sudden
fight in the heat of passion upon a sudden quarrel and
without the offender’s having taken undue advantage or acted
in a cruel or unusual manner. Under s. 302 whoever commits
murder shall be punished with death, or imprisonment for
life, and shall also be liable to fine. Whoever commits.
Culpable homicide not amounting to murder, shall be punished
with imprisonment for life, or imprisonment of either
description for a term which may extend to ten years, or
with fine, or with both. Under second part of s. 304 I.P.C.
if the act is done with the knowledge that it is likely to
cause death, but without any intention to cause death, or to
cause such bodily injury as is likely to cause death.
It is, therefore, clear that culpable homicide is murder
when the accused causes death by doing an act with the
intention of causing death, or causing such bodily injury as
is likely to cause death, or with the knowledge that he is
likely by such act to cause death. If the accused
intentionally causes bodily injury which is found to be
sufficient in the ordinary course of nature to cause death
if would attract clause thirdly of s. 300 I.P.C. If the
accused knows that the act he causes is so imminently
dangerous that it must, in all probability, cause death or
such bodily injury as is likely to cause death, and commits
such act without any excuse for incurring the risk of
causing death or such injury it would attract clause
fourthly. It would be murder unless it is brought in any
one of the exceptions. In a given case even if the case
does not fall in any of the exceptions, still if the
ingredients of clauses 1 to 4 of Section 3(X) are not
satisfied, then it would be culpable homiest not amounting
to murder punishable under s. 304 either clause 1 or clause
2. It is, therefore, the duty of the prosecution to prove
the offence of murder.
The counsel attempted to bring the case within exception 4.
For its application all the conditions enumerated therein
must be satisfied. The act must be committed without
premeditation in a sudden fight in the heat of passion; (2)
upon
701
a sudden quarrel; (3) without the offender shaving taken
undue advantage; (4) and the accused had not acted in a
cruel or unusual manner. Therefore, there must be a mutual
combat or exchanging blows on each other. And however
slight the first blow, or provocation, every fresh blow
becomes a fresh provocation. The blood is already heated or
warms up at every subsequent stroke. The voice of reason is
heard on neither side in the heat of passion. Therefore, it
is difficult to apportion between them respective degrees of
blame with reference to the state of things at the
commencement of the fray but it must occur as a consequence
of a sudden fight i.e. mutual combat and not one side track.
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It matters not what the cause of the quarrel is, whether
real or imaginary, or who draws or strikes first. The
strike of the blow must be without any intention to kill or
seriously injure the other. If two men start fighting and
one of them is unarmed while the other uses a deadly weapon,
the one who uses such weapon must be held to have taken an
undue advantage denying him the entitlement to exception 4.
True the number of wound is not the criterion, but the
position of the accused and the deceased with regard to
their arms used, the manner of combat must be kept in mind
when applying exception 4. When the deceased was not armed
but the accused was and caused injuries to the deceased with
fatal results, the exception 4 engrafted to Section 300 is
excepted and the offences committed would be one of murder.
The occasion for sudden quarrel must not only be sudden but
the party assaulted must be on an equal footing in point of
defence, at least at the onset. This is specially so where
the attack is made with dangerous weapons. Where the
deceased was unarmed and did not cause any injury to the
accused even following a sudden quarrel if the accused has
inflicted fatel blows on the deceased, exception 4 is not
attracted and commission must be one of murder punishable
under s. 302. Equally for attracting exception 4 it is
necessary that blows should be exchanged even if they do not
all find their target. Even if the fight is unpremeditated
and sudden, yet if the instrument of manner of retaliation
be greatly disproportionate to the offence given, and cruel
and dangerous in its nature, the accused cannot be protected
under exception 4. In Pandurang Narayan Jawalekar v. State
of maharashtra [1979] 1 SCC 132, the facts proved were that
the appellant gave a blow on the head of the deceased old
man who was advising him not to quarrel. The injury caused
to the brain from one end to the other resulted in fracture
as could appear from the evidence of the doctor. It would
show that the accused must have struck the blow on the head
of the deceased with an iron bar with very great force.
Accordingly it was held that exception 4 does not apply
though there was sudden quarrel and that the fight was not
premeditated to cause death. It must be shown that the
injury caused is not cruel one. The conviction for offence
under s. 302 by the High Court reversing the acquittal by
trial court was upheld.
702
If the weapon used or the manner of attack by the assailant
is out of all proportion to the offence given that
circumstance must be taken into consideration to decide
whether undue advantage has been taken. Where a person,
during the course of sudden fight, without premeditation and
probably in the heat of passion, took undue advantage and
acted in a cruel manner in using a deadly weapon there was
no ground to hold that his act did not amount to murder.
Therefore, if the appellant used deadly weapons against
the unarmed man and struck him a blow on the head it must be
held that he inflicted the blows with the knowledge that
they would likely to cause death and he had taken undue
advantage. He did not stop with the first blow, he inflicted
two more blows on the fallen man and the third one proved to
be fatal. He acted cruelly with no justification. By his
conduct the appellant denied himself of the benefit of
exception 4 to s. 300 I.P.C.
In Virsa Singh v. State of Punjab AIR 1958 SC 465, a leading
forerunner on the point, this Court held that the
prosecution must prove that bodily injury is present. The
nature of the injury must be proved. Thirdly, it must he
proved that there was an intention to inflict that
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particular bodily injury, that is to say, that it was not
accidental or an intentional,or that some other kind of
injury was intended. Once these three elements are proved to
be present, the court must further proceed with the enquiry
and find that the prosecution has proved that the injury
described is sufficient to cause death in the ordinary
course of nature. This part of the enquiry is purely
objective and inferential and has nothing to do with the
intention of the offender. Once these four elements are
established by the prosecution the offence of murder falls
under clause thirdly of Section 300. It matters not that
there was no intention to cause death or that there was no
intention even to cause death in the ordinary course of
nature. Once it is proved that the intention to cause the
bodily injury actually found to be present, the rest of the
enquiry is purely objective to be deduced by inference. But
where no evidence or explanation is given about why the
accused thrust a spear into the abdomen of the decease with
such force that it penetrated the bowels and three coils of
the intestines came out of the wound and that digested food
oozed out from cuts in three places, it would be perverse to
conclude that he did not intend to inflict the injury that
he did. The question whether there is intention or not is
one of fact and not one of law. Whether the wound is serious
or otherwise, and if serious, how serious, is a totally
separate and distinct question and has nothing to do with
the question whether the accused intended to inflict the
injury in question. It was held in that case that the
offence was one of murder falling under clause thirdly of
Section 302. In Rajwant Singh v. State of kerala AIR [1996]
SC 1874, the bodily injury consisted of tying up the hands
and the feet of the victim, closing the mouth with adhesive
plaster and plugging the nostrils with cotton soaked in
chloroform. All these acts were
703
deliberate acts which had been preplanned and, therefore,
this Court held that the acts satisfied the objective tests
of clause 3 of s. 300 and were held to be sufficient in the
ordinary course to cause death. Accordingly it was one
punishable under s. 302.
It is not necessary that death must be inevitable or in all
circumstances the injury inflicted must cause death. If the
probability of death is very great the requirement of clause
third is satisfied. If there is prob ability in a less
degree of death ensuing from the act committed the finding
should be of culpable homicide not amounting to murder. The
emphasis is sufficiency of injury to cause death. A judge
must always try to find whether the bodily injury inflicted
was that which the accused intended to inflict. The
intention must be gathered from a careful examination of all
the facts and circumstances in a given case. The citus at
which the injury was inflicted, nature of the injury, weapon
used, force with which it was used are all relevant facts.
We find from the facts that the appellant inflicted fatal
blow, i.e. 3rd injury severing the neck after the deceased
had fallen on the ground due to impact of the first injury
on practical region. The third injury is proved to he
sufficient in the ordinary course of nature to cause death.
Even otherwise death is inevitable. When the appellant
inflicted two injuries on a fallen man, it must be held that
he intended to inflict those two injuries, though the first
injury may be assumed to have been inflicted during the
course of altercation. Thus we hold that the offence is one
of murder and the appellant was rightly convicted and
sentenced to imprisonment for life under s. 302 I.P.C.
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The appeal is, therefore, dismissed.
R. P. Appeal dismissed,
704