Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
NISHAR AHMED FAJMOHMED KAJI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF GUJART
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/11/1997
BENCH:
M.M. PUNCHHI, M. SRINIVASAN
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
THE 7TH DAY OF NOVEMBER, 1997
Present:
Hon’ble Mr. Justice M.M.Punchhi
Hon’ble Mr.Justice M.Srinivasan
Narayan N. Keshwani, R.N. Keshwani and Sanjay Kumar, Advs.
for the appellant
Dr. N.M. Ghatate, Sr.Adv., S.K. Sabharwal, Ms. Neithono
Rhetaso, and Ms. Hemantika Wahi, Advs. with him for the
Respondent
J U D G M E N T
The following Judgment of the Court was delivered:
Srinivasan, J.
1. The appellant and another per son by name Dilip Bhagwan
Rai were prosecuted in the Court of Sessions, Valsad at
Navasri, State of Gujarat for the offences punishable under
Sections 302 and 34 of the I.P.C. on the charges that they
committed murder of one Gajanand Patel on 4.8.1984 within
the compound of Court of Judicial Magistrate (F.C.), Pardi.
The deceased was an advocate by profession and the General
Secretary of an employees’ union. On 4.8.1984 at about
11.45 a.m. he reached the Court of the Judicial Magistrate
by car alongwith four other persons, three of them being
advocates. When the deceased was climbing the steps to go
to the court room, he was shot by the appellant with a
pistol. There were thereof firings. While two of them hit
the deceased, one just caused abrasion on his body and fell
outside. He was taken to the court room and soon thereafter
he was removed to Dr. Nedkarni’s treatment by Dr. Purnima
Nadkarni. She advised to take him to Kasturba hospital at
Valsad for further treatment. At about 12.30 p.m he was
taken to the said hospital. A message had meanwhile call.
A sub-inspector the complaint of the victim. Thereafter the
Sub-inspector conveyed the message to the executive
Magistrate who went to the hospital at about 2.00 p.m. and
recorded the dying declaration of the injured. In the said
dying declaration as well as in a statement made by the
deceased in Dr. Nadkrani’s hospital, the name of the
appellant was mentioned as the person who shot the victim.
The doctor started the operation at about 3.30 p.m. and
completed the same at about 7.25 p.m But soon thereafter the
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victim collapsed and died at about 7.30 p.m.
2. It was found that the appellant and the other
accomplice were in the court room of the Judicial MAGISTRATE
(F.C.), Valsad for attending a case under police bandobest.
The appellant and his accomplice were taken to custody and
interrogated by the police.
They were arrested at about 8.30 p.m. in the police station
at Valsad. According to the prosecution on 4.8.84 a
judgment was to be delivered by the J.M.F.C, Valsad in a
case wherein the appellant and his accomplice were accused
and they were present in Court for that purpose and that the
police had given them bandobest as they apprehended breach
of peace. Both had left the court premises around 11.00
a.m. and returned to the Court at 12.30 p.m. They were seen
to be coming on a moter-cycle and parking the same in the
compound. As it was raining on that day the clothes of the
accused were also found wet.
3. The prosecution examined for eye witnesses three of
whom were advocates who went to the Court at Pardi alongwith
the deceased in the same car and the fourth being the driver
of that car. Dr. Purnima Nadkarni who gave the preliminary
treatment to the deceased soon after the incident and Dr.
Harit Desai who operated on the deceased were also examined
as PWs 13 and 12 respectively. The secretary of the
deceased who had taken him to the hospital in a tempo was
examined as PW 7. The Head Constable who was posted
alongwith other policemen for the bandobast in the Court at
Valsad was examined as PW.16. The two statements given by
the deceased in the hospital were marked as Ex.44 and Ex.53
On a consideration of the entire evidence on record, the
Sessions Judge held that the prosecution had established its
case against the accused beyond any doubt and convicted them
under Section 302 and 34 I.P.C. The appellant was convicted
also under Section 25-A of the Arms Act. The appellant was
sentenced to life imprisonment and payment of fine of Rs.
500/- for the offence under Section 302 read with Section 34
I.P.C. For the other offence he was sentenced to undergo RI
for six months concurrently. The accused preferred and
appeal before the High Court. During the pendency of the
appeal and other accused Dilip Bhagwan Rai expired. On an
analysis of the evidence, the High Court concurred with the
view expressed by the Sessions Judge and confirmed the
conviction and sentence. The appellant has preferred this
appeal by Special Leave.
4. Learned counsel for the appellant has vehemently argued
that the case of the prosecution is wholly improbable and
that it has not been proved by satisfactory evidence.
According to him, when the accused were admittedly present
in the court of JMFC, Valsad under the bandobast of the
police they could not have gone to the court at Pardi and
committed the offence as alleged by the prosecution. It is
argued that the version of the Head Constable PW 16 is
totally unacceptable on the face of it, in the absence of
any record to support the same and he should not have been
believed by the courts below.
5. We do not find any merit in this contention. the
evidence of PW 16 is quite natural and in the circumstances
of the case there could not have been any record for the
absence of the accused for about an hour and a half from the
premises of the court at Valsad. The Trial Court as well as
the High Court have discussed his evidence at length and
considered the present contention in the proper perspective.
We do not find any infirmity in the said discussion. We
have no reason whatever to differ from the courts below and
disbelieve PW 16.
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6. The second contention of learned counsel for the
appellant is that all the four eye-witnesses are interested
persons and they are not worthy of any credence. There is
nothing on record to show how the said witnesses were
interested to speak against the accused. Nothing has been
placed on record to indicate any enmity or motive on their
part to speak against the accused. The mere fact that three
of them were advocates and the fourth was the driver of the
deceased is not sufficient to dub them as interested
persons. There is no doubt whatever that the said witnesses
were in the same car by which the deceased went to the court
at Pardi and they were all present at the scene of
occurrence. We do not find any merit in this contention
7. The next contention is that the High Court was in error
in refusing permission to the appellants to examine an
independent eye witness by name Kirti Ratilal Rajput and an
adverse inference should have been drawn against the
prosecution for not examining the said person in court as a
witness. During the pendency of the appeal in the High
Court, the appellant filed an application for examining
Kirta Ratilal Rajput as a court witness alleging that he was
an independent eye witness and his statement was recorded in
the course of investigation under Section 162 of the Cr.P.C,
but the prosecution. We are unable to accept this
contention. The High Court had found that the statement
made before the police by the said Kirti Ratilal Rajput was
not against the prosecution and in no sense or manner in
favour of the appellant The application for examining him
was made after a lapse of seven years from the date of
occurrence, some time before the hearing of the appeal
though the appeal was itself pending from 1985. The High
Court has rightly rejected the application filed by the
appellants.
8. The fourth contention of learned counsel is that the
eye witnesses did not identify the accused and could not
have identified him. He placed reliance on the judgment of
this Court in State of Orissa versus Brahmananda, AIR 1976
SC 2488 wherein it was held that if in a murder case the
entire prosecution depended on the evidence of the person of
a person claiming to be an eye witness and the said witness
did not disclose the name of the assailant for a day and a
half after the incident and the explanation offered for such
non-disclosure was unbelievable, such non-disclosure was a
serious infirmity which destroyed the credibility of the
evidence of the witness and that the High Court was correct
in rejecting it as untrustworthy. There is no merit
whatever in the contention. All the eye witnesses had known
the appellant for more than three years prior to the
occurrence. Their presence at the scene of occurrence was
quite natural and established. They had seen the appellant
running away from the stops of the court room. The courts
below were not in error in accepting their testimony. The
above ruling cited by the learned counsel has no application
in the facts of this case his contention is rejected.
9. The fifth contention is that there is discrepancy
between the medical evidence and the ocular evidence. It is
contended by the learned counsel that the medical report
shows that firing could not have taken place from a short
distance and the person, who fired the pistol should have
been far away and therefore the witnesses could not have
identified the said person. It is pointed out by the High
Court there cannot be a definite opinion regarding the
distance from which shot was fired. As per the evidence of
PW 22, a Senior Scientific Officer in Forensic Science
Laboratory, Ahmedabad, on examination of the skin samples,
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it could not be said with certainty whether the firing was
from a particular distance. According to him, the
blackening of the skin would be there in a case of pistol or
revolver fired from the distance of about 2 feet to 3 feet
while powder marks could be detected even from a distance of
20 feet in cases of those two weapons. He has also stated:
"I do not agree that as the range
increases tatooing from the powder
more spare until no trace of powder
marks are found which normally
beyond a yard."
Thus there is no discrepancy between the medical
evidence and ocular evidence. this contention is also
rejected.
10. The last argument is that the dying declaration given
by the deceased should not have been accepted as the name of
the accused was introduced therein at the instance of his
relatives and it was not mentioned by the deceased on his
own. Learned counsel for the appellant refers to a
statement of Dr. Hirabhai PW 12 to the affect that the name
of the accused was given by a relative and not by the
deceased. It is, therefore, contended that the deceased did
not mention the name of the appellant on his own in Ext.44.
There is no substance in this contention. Even before the
deceased was taken to Kasturba hospital at Valsad, he was
given preliminary treatment by Dr. Purnima Nadkarni. In her
presence, the deceased had mentioned the name of the
appellant as the person who had fired the bullets at him.
Her deposition in this regard is very clear and has not been
shaken in any manner in the cross examination. We have no
hesitation to affirm the view expressed by the courts below
accepting the reliability of the dying declaration of the
deceased.
11. Learned counsel for the appellant has placed reliance
on the judgment in Milkivet Singh versus State of Rajasthan
AIR 1981 SC 1578. In that case, the dying declaration was
not attested by the wife of the deceased or the doctor
present in the hospital. The court found that it was a
matter of concoction. Besides, there was inconsistency
between the medical and ocular evidence. The court held
that the conviction of the accused was unsustainable and
reversed the judgment of the High Court. the facts in that
case are entirely different and the ruling has no bearing in
the present case.
12. On a consideration of all the materials on record we
have no hesitation to affirm the concurrent judgment of the
courts below and dismiss this appeal.