Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
R. PANDIAN AND ANOTHERA. DEIVENDRAN SON OF M. AMMAVASITHEVAR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF TAMIL NADUTHROUGH THE SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF HOME
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 21/10/1997
BENCH:
G.N. RAY, G.B. PATTANAIK
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
Present:
Hon’ble Mr. Justice G.N.Ray
Hon’ble Mr. Justice G.B.Pattanaik
S. Muralidhar and Ms. Neery Vaid, Advs. for the appellants
R. Mohan, Sr. Adv., V.G. Pragasam, Adv. with him for the
Respondents
J U D G M E N T
The following Judgment of the Court was delivered:
with
CRIMINAR APPEAL NO.988 OF 1997
(@SPECIAL LEAVE PETITION (CRL.) NO.398 OF 1996)
PATTANAIK,J.
Leave granted on both Special leave Petitions.
Criminal appeal arising out of Special Leave Petition
(Crl). No. 487 of 1996 is by the convict A. Devandran who
has been sentenced to death by the learned District and
Session Judge, Madurai in Sessions Case No. 91 of 1994 and
the said death. sentence has been confirmed by the High
Court of Madras in Criminal Appeal No. 717 of 1995. The
Criminal Appeal arising out of special Leave Petition
(Criminal) No. 3598 of 1996 is by accused R. Pandian and R.
Thungamalai who have been convicted under Section 302 and
have been sentenced to imprisonment for life by same learned
Sessions Judge in the same Session Trial and their
conviction and sentence has been upheld by Madras High Court
in the aforesaid Criminal Appeal No. 717 of 1995. These
three appellants alongwith two others stood charged of
several offence under Section 120B, 148, 449, 302/34 and
326/34. Out of the five accused persons accused Bellaithai
was acquitted by the learned Sessions Judge. Accused Mohd.
Rafiq was granted pardon by the Chief Judicial Magistrate on
14.11.1994 while the case had already been committed to the
court of Sessions and was pending trail before the learned
Sessions Judge. He was examined as approver and is PW-1 in
the criminal proceedings. The three accused appellants were
also convicted under Section 120B, 449, 326/34 IPC and were
sentenced to imprisonment for 10 years for conviction under
Section 120B, 10 years for conviction under Section 449 and
3 years fro conviction under Section 326/34 IPC. The learned
Sessions Judge directed the sentences to run concurrently.
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All of them, however, were acquitted of the charge under
Section 148 IPC. The High Court by the impugned judgment
apart from affirming the conviction and sentence under
Section 302 IPC, as already stated, affirmed the conviction
and sentence under Section 449, 326/34 IPC and 120B.
The prosecution case in nutshell is that accused
Devendran had given some monetary assistance to the approver
PW-1 while he was ill. After the approver was cured of his
illness he was asked to work in the house of Devendran.
While he was so working the accused Nos. 2 and 3 came to the
house of Devendran and informed him that there was lot of
jewels and cash in the house of PW-5 and they could commit
robbery in the said house. Accused Devendran, however,
respondent that it would not be easy affair to commit
dacoity without knowing the topography of the house. At the
point of time accused No. 2 replied that his mother who was
accused no. 5 has been working in the house of PW-5 for more
than ten years and, therefore, it would not be difficult to
know the topography of the house from her. Accordingly
accused no. 2 went to the house of PW-5 on the direction of
accused no. 1 ascertain the topography of the house. The
said accused no. 2 then intimated that the inmates of the
house of PW-5 will be going out on 24.11.1992 and that would
be an ideal occasion for committing robbery. He also
intimated that the only way to enter into to the house is
through the Chimney. In accordance with a conspiracy thus
hatched, on 24.11.1992 accused Devendran gave some
conspiracy thus hatched. on 24.11. 1992 accused Devendran
gave some money to other accused persons and asked them to
the come back after taking tiffin. PW-1 started weeping as
he was forced to become a party to commit a robbery. Then
under pressure from accused Devendran PW-1 accompanied by
other accused persons entered the house through the Chimney.
Further prosecution case is that the accused persons while
entering into the house of PW-5 to commit robbery took with
them a double barrel gun, a pistol, a small knife, a torch
light, gloves and some ropes. Thereafter all of them entered
into the house through the Chimney by the help of the rope
which had been tied upon. After entering the house accused
Devendran made some sound and on hearing the said sound an
old lady came out of the room through the kitchen.
Immediately Devendran twisted her neck while the accused
no.3 tied her legs with a rope. PW-1 was asked to stand as a
guard. When the lady asked PW-1 to get some water PW-1 went
inside but before water could be brought the lady died. The
accused persons then entered into the room where another
lady was sleeping and accused Devendran strangulated the
said lady with a piece of cloth while accused Devendran was
strangulating her the 2nd accused was holding her legs and
on account of such strangulation the old lady also died. PW-
2 a young girls who was there inside the house then came
running but the accused persons threaten her to kill if she
makes any sound. Then the accused persons wanted the keys of
the house from her and PW-2 gave a particular set of key.
Through the help of that key the 2nd and 3rd accused persons
opened up a container wherein lot of jewels and cash was
there. The accused persons brought out a box and filled the
same with the cash and jewels. As they could not get the
keys of other containers they broke open trough a crow-bar
and it is at that point of time the blowing of horn of a
jeep was heard. PW-2 somehow escaped through the front door
to tell her parents, who had gone but, about what has
happened in the house. Nagarajan the driver and PW-5 the
father of PW-2 rushed into the house and immediately accused
Devendran fired at him. Nagarajan sustained the Bullet
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injuries on his chest and fell down. All the accused persons
the took the jewels and cash and then escaped through the
staircase. By this time several other people had gathered
but nobody could venture to catch hold of the accused
persons as they were having the guns and threatened to kill
whosoever tries to catch them. The accused persons then went
out of the place of occurrence and distributed the ornaments
recovered from the house of PW-5 and then dispersed. PW-2
then gave a written complaint to the police which was
treated as FIR and police thereupon started investigation.
Ultimately after completion of investigation chargesheet was
submitted and the learned Magistrate on being satisfied
about the existence of prima facie case committed the
accused for trail. The case has been committed to the Court
of Sessions on 27.1.1994 and while the matter was pending
before the learned Sessions Judge an application was foiled
for grant of pardon to accused Mohd. Rafiq on 8.8.1994. The
learned Sessions 164 of Code of Criminal Procedure on
25.8.1994. The learned Sessions Judge then considered the
application for grant of pardon and by order dated
27.10.1994 forwarded the same to the Chief Judicial
Magistrate to be dealt with in accordance with law. The
Chief Judicial Magistrate finally granted pardon to the said
accused Mohd. Rafiq on 14.11.1994 and re-submitted the
records to the learned Sessions Judge. Before the learned
Sessions Judge the said accused who was granted pardon by
the Chief Judicial Magistrate was examined as PW-1 and
thereafter the other prosecution witness were examined and
finally the learned Sessions Judge by his judgment dated
14th July, 1995, convicted the three accused appellants
under different Sections and sentenced them differently as
already stated. Accused No. 5, however, was acquitted of the
charges levelled against her on a finding that the
prosecution failed to establish charges beyond reasonable
doubt. Said conviction and sentences passed by the learned
Sessions Judge have been upheld by the High Court and thus
the appeals. It may be stated here that the prosecution
examined as many as 25 witnesses and exhibited large number
of documents in support of its case and the defence also
examined three witness and exhibited number of documents.
Out of the 25 prosecution witness examined in these cases
apart from the evidence of PW-1, the approver two other
important witnesses are PW-2, the young girl who ran out of
the house immediately when the second of the jeep was heard
and PW-5 who was injured while entering into the house after
hearing the incident from his daughter PW-2. The learned
Sessions Judge as well as the High Court relied upon the
evidence of the approver PW-1 having held the same to be
trustworthy and having come to the conclusion that the
approver’s evidence gets corroboration in material
particulars from the evidence of the doctor and certain
recoveries made from the accused persons. The two Courts
also believed the evidence of PWs 2 and 5 which establishes
the complicity of the three appellants with the commission
of the crime.
Mr. Muralidhar. the learned counsel appearing for the
appellants attached the evidence of PW-1 on several grounds
and submitted that the said evidence of the approver cannot
at all be relied upon by the prosecution in support of the
prosecution case. According to the learned counsel under
Criminal Procedure Code, 1973, the power to grant pardon
lies only with the Sessions Judge, once the case is
committed to the Court of Sessions, as provided in Section
307 of the Code of Criminal Procedure (hereinafter referred
to as the ‘Code’). Since the Session Judge did not exercise
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his power and on the other hand forwarded the matter to be
dealt with by the chief Judicial Magistrate and ultimately
Chief Judicial Magistrate granted pardon to the accused the
said order is without jurisdiction and illegal and as such
the accused Rafiq cannot be held to be an approver in the
eye of law. The learned counsel further contended that even
assuming the order of the Chief Judicial Magistrate granting
pardon to the accused can be sustained, but yet non-
compliance of Sub-section (4)(a) of Section 306 of the Code
vitiates the entire proceedings and consequently the
evidence of the approver when he was examined as PW-1 has to
be excused from consideration. According to the learned
counsel the requirements of Sub-Section (4)(a) of Section
306 is mandatory in nature and confers a valuable right on
the accused and non-compliance thereof vitiates the entire
proceedings relating to the examination of the approver as
witness in the case. He also * that if the approver’s
evidence is examined it would appear that the same is wholly
exculpatory in nature and, therefore, no reliance can be
placed on the same. The further contention of the learned
counsel is that the circumstances under which the accused
agreed to become an approver indicated that it was under
coercion and threat and not voluntary and on the score the
evidence of the approver PW-1 cannot be relied upon. The
last argument advanced by Mr. Muralidhar, the learned
counsel relating to the reliability of the approver’s
evidence is, that the said evidence does not get
corroboration from any independent materials neither with
regard to the identity of the accused persons nor with
regard to the role played by them, and as such the
approver’s evidence must be held to be untrustworthy and
should not be acted upon. So far as the other items of
evidence relied upon by the prosecution the learned counsel
appearing for the appellants urged that after the approver’s
evidence is excluded from, consideration, on the residuary
evidence the charges against the appellants cannot be said
to have been established by the prosecution beyond all
reasonable doubts and, therefore, the appellants are
entitled to acquitted. On the question of award of death
sentence on accused Devendran the learned counsel urged that
no doubt in course of incident three persons have been
alleged to have been killed by said Devendran but the
circumstances leading to the death of those three persons as
unfolded the prosecution evidence, even if believe in toto
do not make out the case to be one of the rarest of rare
category justifying imposition of the extreme penalty of
death and, therefore, the order of the High Court confirming
the death sentence has to be set aside.
Mr. Mohan, the learned senior counsel appearing for the
respondent/State on the other hand contended that the very
object of granting pardon to one of the accused who agrees
to be a witness of the prosecution to unfold the entire
incident engrafted under Section 306 and 307 of the Code
will frustrated if a technical view of the provisions is
taken and, therefore, no prejudice having been caused by the
grant of pardon by the Chief Judicial Magistrate the said
order cannot be held to be beyond jurisdiction. Mr. Mohan,
the learned senior counsel further urged that a Sessions
Judge has to the power to delegate his function under the
Code to a subordinate office by the virtue of sub-section
(3) of Section 10 of the Code and, therefore, the impugned
direction of the Sessions Judge calling upon the Chief
Judicial Magistrate to deal with the application for grant
of pardon in accordance with law cannot be held to be
without jurisdiction. The learned counsel also urged that on
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a plain reading of Section 306 of the Code it appears that
the Chef Judicial Magistrate can exercise power to grant
pardon even after the committal of the proceedings to the
Court of Session which is apparent from the expression ‘at
any stage of the trial’ used in Sub-section (1) of Section
306 and, therefore, a combined reading of Section 306 and
307 would indicate that the Sessions Judge and the Chief
Judicial Magistrate have concurrent jurisdiction to grant
pardon. Judged from this stand point the order of the Chief
Judicial Magistrate granting pardon to accused PW-1 cannot
be held to be illegal. So far as non-compliance of Sub-
section (4)(a) of Section 306 of the Code is concerned, the
learned senior counsel appearing for the State urged that
after the case is committed to the Court of Sessions when
pardon to an accused is granted under Section 307 the
provision of Section 306, and more particularly Sub-Section
(4)(a) thereof are not attracted. According to the learned
counsel the expression ‘tender a pardon on the same
condition’ used in Section 307 is referable to condition
engrafted in Sub-section (1) of Section 306 of the Code,
namely, a Magistrate may tender pardon to a person on
condition of his making a full and true disclosure. The
procedural requirements of sub-section (4)(a) of Section 306
cannot be held to be a condition and as such the said
provision cannot be attracted to a case where pardon is
granted under Section 307 after the case is committed to the
Court of Sessions. In support of this contention reliance
was placed on the decisions of this Court in : S
Naravanaswami vs. Paneer Salvam (1973) 1 SCR 172, Iqbal
Singh vs. State (Delhi Administration) Ors. (1978) 2 SCR
174, and a decision of Orissa High Court in State vs. Bigvan
Mallik & Ors. (1975) Crl. Law Journal 1937.
The learned counsel further urged that even if it is held
that the Chief Judicial Magistrate had no jurisdiction to
grant pardon since the case had been committed to the Court
of Session yet the said order of the Magistrate is curable
under Section 460 (g) of the Code inasmuch as the most it
would be case of Magistrate not empowered by law to grant
pardon has granted pardon. The leaned counsel also urged
that no objection having been taken to the procedure adopted
by the Sessions Judge and then to the granting of pardon by
the Chief Judicial Magistrate and there have been no failure
of justice on the score, the provisions of section 465 of
the Code get attached and the conviction and sentence of the
accused appellants cannot be reversed. On question of
appreciation of the evidence the learned counsel urged that
when the learned Sessions Judge and the High Court have
appraised the evidence and have accepted the same, it would
not appropriate for this Court to enter into the arena of
appreciation unless it is established that there has been
violation of principles of natural justice or a mis-reading
of a vital part of the evidence or the Court have committed
and error of law or of the forms of legal process or
procedure by which justice itself has filed. Since none of
there pre-conditions are satisfied, the learned counsel
urged that this Court should not re-appreciate the evidence
and record its own conclusion. In support of this contention
reliance was placed on the judgment of this Court in the
case of Sarvanabhavan and Govindaswamy vs. State of Madras
AIR 1966 SC 1278. The learned counsel further urged that the
evidence of the approver gets corroborated from other
independent sources to the material particulars of the
approver’s evidence and such corroboration makes the
approver’s trustworthy and reliable. According to the
learned counsel the medical evidence relating to the death
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of three persons and the injuries of PW-5, the statement of
the investigating officer as to what he found immediately
after the occurrence when he reached the place of
occurrence, the recovery of Mahaja exhibit P-29, the
evidence of PW-2 who was in the house at the time of
occurrence and the lodging of FIR immediately after the
occurrence as well as the recoveries made from different
accused persons and further the evidence of the ballistic
expert PW-25 fully corroborate the evidence of the approver
PW-1 and as such the Courts below rightly relied upon the
evidence of the said approver. The learned counsel also
urged that the murder of 3 persons and robbery committed by
the accused constitute an integral part of same transaction
and, therefore, the possession of stolen or named by the
accused would establish that the accused committed both
murder and robbery and the presumption would arise under
Section 114 of the Evidence Act. The learned counsel also
urged that even excluding the evidence of the approver the
conviction of the appellants can well be sustained on the
residuary evidence of PWs 2 and 5 and other recoveries made
from the accused persons. Lastly on the question of death
sentence on appellant Devendran the learned counsel urged
that the manner in which said accused mercilessly killed two
ladies and then shot at the man who entered inside the house
indicate the action to be of depraved mind and in the
absence of any mitigating circumstances the case would be
one coming within the category of rarest of rare case and as
such imposition of death sentence is wholly justified. In
support of this reliance has been placed on the decision of
this Court in Sevaka Perumal vs. State of Tamil Nadu (1991)
3 SCC 471 and Shankar @ Gaurishankar & Ors. Vs. State of
Tamil Nadu (1994) 4 SCC 478.
In view of the rival submission, the first question
that arises for consideration is whether the approver’s
evidence can at all be relied upon to bring home the charge
against the accused persons? It si no doubt true that the
very objected of granting pardon to an accused is to unfold
the truth in grave offence so that other accused persons
involved in the offence could be brought home with the aid
of the evidence of the approver. But all the same the
legislative mandates as well as the safeguards enshrined in
the provisions of the Code for the accused cannot be given a
go by merely because of gravity of the offence. With his
backgrounds in mind it would be necessary to examine the
provision of the Code for testing the correctness of the
rival submission. Coming now the question as to whether the
Chief Judicial Magistrate could have at all granted pardon
to the accused even after the committal of the proceedings
to the Court of Sessions, the same would depend upon the
interpretation of Section 306 and 307 of the Code. A
combined reading of Section 306 and 307 of the Code. A
combined reading of the aforesaid two provision would
indicate that under Section 306 power has been conferred
upon the Chief Judicial Magistrate or a Metropolitan
Magistrate as well as the Magistrate of the First Class to
tender pardon to a person on condition of his making a full
and true disclosure of whole of the circumstances within his
knowledge relating to the offence. The only distinction
between the two sets of Magistrate for exercise of their
power lies at the stage when the power can be exercised.
While a Magistrate of the First Class can exercise the power
while enquiring into or trying the offence in question, the
Chief Judicial Magistrate or a Metropolitan Magistrate can
exercise the power at any stage of investigation or enquiry
into or trail of the offence which they themselves may not
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be trying. But under Section 307 the power has been
conferred upon the Court to which the commitment is made to
grant pardon. In other words once a proceeding is committed
to a Court of Session then only the said Court can exercise
power to tender pardon to an accused. Section 307 of the
Code corresponds to Section 338 of Criminal Procedure Code,
1878, If the two provisions are examined in justaposition it
would be clear that while under Section 338 of the old Code
after commitment is made the Court to an accused or could
order the committing Magistrate or the District Magistrate
to tender pardon, but under Section 307 of the Code of 1973
the Court to whom commitment is made, no longer retains the
power to order the committing Magistrate or the District
Magistrate to tender pardon. In other words under Section
307 of the present Code after commitment of a case the only
Court which can tender pardon is the Court to which the
commitment has been made. It would be appropriate at this
state of extract Section 338 of the old Code and the
corresponding provisions of Section 307 of the new Code:-
"338. Power to direct tender of
pardon. - At any time after
commitment, but before judgment is
passed, the Court to which to the
commitment is made may. with the
view of obtaining on the trail the
evidence of any person supposed to
have been directly or indirectly
concerned in, or privy, to any, any
such offence, tender, or order the
committing Magistrate or the
District Magistrate to tender, a
pardon on the same conditions to
such persons."
"307. Power to direct tender of
pardon. -At any time after
commitment of a case but before
judgment is passed, the Court to
which the commitment is made may,
with a view to obtaining at the
trail the evidence of any person
supposed to have been directly or
indirectly concerned in, or privy
to any such offence, tender a
pardon on the same condition to
such person."
In view of the aforesaid change in the provisions it is
difficult for us to accept the contention of the learned
counsel appearing for the State of even under Section 307
after commitment of a case a Chief Judicial Magistrate
retains the power to grant pardon. It may not be out of
place to notice the recommendation of the Law Commission in
its 41 st Report in paragraph 24.23
"24.23. Under Section 338, the
Court of Session may at any time
after commitment of the case, but
before passing judgment either
tender pardon itself, or may "order
the committing Magistrate or the
District Magistrate" to tender
pardon. Though this power is rarely
resorted to by a Court of Session,
it will be useful to retain the
section. But in view of the
abolition of the commitment
proceedings the Court of Session
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need not be authorised to direct
"the committing Magistrate" or any
other Magistrate to tender pardon.
The section may be revised to read
as follows:-
"338. At any time after commitment
of a case but before judgment is
passed, the Court of Session may,
with the view to obtaining at the
trial the evidence of any person
supposed to have been directly or
indirectly concerned in or privy
to, any such offence, tender a
pardon on the same condition to
such person."
The aforesaid Section has now taken the place of
Section 307 in the new Code. This indicates that in the
changed circumstances the legislatures thought it necessary
to delete the expression "or order the committing Magistrate
or the District Magistrate to tender a pardon" from Section
307 of the present Code which was there in Section 338 of
the previous Code. On a plain reading of the provision
contained in Section 306 and 307 of the Code and on
examining the changes that have been brought about by the
legislature from the corresponding provisions of the old
Code, the conclusion is irresistible that under the new
Procedure Code of 1973 once a case is committed to the
Court of Sessions then it is only that Court to which the
proceedings have been committed can tender pardon to a
person and the Chief Judicial Magistrate cannot be said to
have concurrent jurisdiction for tendering pardon.
It would be necessary in this context to examine the
contention raised by Mr. Mohan, learned counsel appearing
for the Court to whom commitment has been made could
exercise power under Sub-section (3) of Section 10 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure and, therefore, could direct a
Chief Juridical Magistrate to deal with the question of
tender of pardon notwithstanding the deletion of the said
power in Section 307 of the Code. The aforesaid contention
though prima facie looks attractive but does not sustain a
deeper scrutiny. Section 10(3) of the Code may be extracted
for better appreciation of the point in question.:-
"The Sessions Judge may also make
provision for the disposal of any
urgent application, in the event of
his absence or inability to act, by
an Additional or Assistant Sessions
Judge, by the Chief Judicial
Magistrate, and every such Judge or
Magistrate shall be deemed to have
jurisdiction to deal with any such
application."
A plain reading of the aforesaid provisions indicate
that a Sessions Judge has been empowered to make provision
for disposal of any urgent application in certain
contingencies by requiring an Additional or Assistant
Sessions Judge or in their absence the Chief Judicial
Magistrate to deal with an application which otherwise would
have been dealt with by the Sessions Judge. The power can be
exercised when the Sessions Judge himself is absent or is
unable to act. The again Chief Judicial Magistrate can be
required to act under this sub-section not merely when the
Sessions Judge himself is absent or unable to act but also
when there is no Additional or Assistant Sessions Judge. In
the case in hand there is no an iota of material to indicate
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that the pre-conditions for exercise of power under-section
(3) of Section 10 of the Code were satisfied or that in fact
the Sessions Judge exercised his power under sub-section (3)
of Section 10. In this view of the matter, the order of the
Sessions Judge dated 27.10.1994 in forwarding the
application for grant of pardon to the Chief Juridical
Magistrate as well as order of the Chief Juridical
Magistrate dated 14.11.1994 granting pardon to the accused
who was examined as PW-1 is not sustainable in law. It would
also be appropriate to deal with submission of Mr. Mohan
appearing for the respondent that the expression ‘trial’ in
Section 306(1) would mean trial of an offence triable by the
court of session and as such a Metropolitan Magistrate or
the Chief Judicial Magistrate may tender a pardon to a
person even after the commitment of the case to the court of
session during the course of trial by the sessions judge. WE
are unable to accept this contention of the learned counsel
as in our view the plain and unambiguous language of Section
307 of the Code makes it explicitly clear that after the
commitment of a case the power to tender pardon lies, under
the Code, with the court to which the commitment is made and
not with any other magistrate including the Chief Judicial
Magistrate. Once a commitment is made the committing
magistrate no longer retains jurisdiction over the
proceedings and that apart the unambiguous language of
Section 307 of the Code does not confer such power on a
magistrate to tender pardon after a case is committed to the
court of session. The expression ‘trial’ used in sub-section
(1) of Section 306 would, therefore, covey the meaning those
cases which are triable either by a magistrate or the chief
judicial magistrate. In other words, in respect of those
cases which are triable by a magistrate, while the
magistrate of First Class inquiring into or trying the
offence can tender pardon at any stage of inquiry or trial,
the Chief Juridical Magistrate can tender pardon at any
state of investigation, or inquiring into or the trial.
Further a magistrate First Class who is in session of the
case can tender pardon in course of inquiry or trail of the
said case while the Chief Juridical Magistrate or
Metropolitan Magistrate can tender pardon even though the
trial is pending before another First Class Magistrate. But
buy no stretch of imagination it can be construed that
under Section 306(1) of the code a Chief Juridical
Magistrate or Metropolitan Magistrate has a power to grant
pardon even after the commitment of the proceeding to the
court of sessions.
At this stage we think it appropriate to notice another
submission of Mr. Mohan appearing for the respondent that
the order of the Chief Judicial Magistrate tendering pardon
can at the most be in irregularity curable under Section
460(g) of the Code and is not null and void. Section 460,
not doubt cures the irregularity specified in the Section if
it is committed by a Magistrate not empowered by the law
provided he committed irregularity erroneously in good
faith. Clause (g) relates to tender pardon under Section
306. It would, therefore, appear that a Magistrate who was
not empowered under Section 306 to tender pardon but
actually tenders pardon in good faith erroneously then such
an irregularity would be curable. Section 460 can have no
reference to an act of a Magistrate who is empowered under
Section 306 but does not possess the jurisdiction after an
order of commitment is passed. Their Chief Judicial
Magistrate no doubt was authorised under Section 306 of the
Code to tender pardon in course of an investigation, inquiry
or trial before the committal of the proceedings to the
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court of sessions. But after commitment of the proceedings
he does not have jurisdiction to grant pardon and in such a
case if the said Chief Judicial Magistrate tenders pardon
then that would not be a curable irregularity within the
ambit of clause (g) of Section 460 of the Code. The
conclusion of ours is further strengthen from the fact that
under the 1898 Code, the corresponding provisions to Section
460 (g) of the 1973 Code was Section 529(g). In the said
provisions it was specifically stated that if any Magistrate
not empowered by law to tender pardon under Section 337 or
338 the same would not vitiate the proceedings. But under
Section 460(g) of the new Code the legislatures have omitted
Section 307 which is corresponding to Section 338, and
therefore, such irregularity committed by the Magistrate
cannot be said to be a curable irregularity under clauses
(g) of Section 460.
The next question that arises for consideration is as
to whether non-examination of the approver as a witness
after grant of pardon and thereby non-compliance of sub-
section 4(a) of Section 306 vitiates the entire proceeding.
In the case in hand there is no dispute that after the Chief
Judicial Magistrate granted pardon to the accused he was
not-examined immediately after the grant of pardon and was
only examined once by the learned Sessions Judge in course
of trial. The question that arises for consideration is :
when an accused is granted pardon after the case is
committed to court of sessions would it be necessary to
comply with sub-section (4)(a) of Section 306 of the Code.
The contention of Mr. Mohan, the learned counsel appearing
for the State in this connection is that Section 307 merely
mandates that pardon should be tendered on the same
condition and such condition obviously refers the condition
indicated in sub-section (1) of Section 306, namely on the
accused making a full and true disclosure of the whole of
the circumstances within his knowledge relating to the
offence and to every other person concerned, whether as
principal or abettor, in the commission thereof. According
to the learned counsel sub-section (4) of Section 306 is not
a condition for tendering pardon but is merely a procedure
which has to be followed when a person is tendered pardon by
a Magistrate in exercise of power under Section 306. Since
after a case committed to the court of session pardon is
tendered by the court to whom the commitment is made, it
would not be necessary for such court of comply with sub-
section (4)(a) of Section 306. Mr. Murlidhar, the learned
counsel appearing for the appellants on the other hand
contended, that the objects and purpose engrafted in clause
(a) of sub-section (4) of Section 306 is to provide a
safeguard to the accused who can cross-examine even at the
preliminary stage on knowing the evidence of the approver
against him and can impeach the said testimony when the
approver is examined in court during trial, if any
contradictions or improvements are made by him. The right of
the accused cannot be denied to him merely because pardon is
tendered after the proceeding is committed to the court of
sessions.
The correctness of the rival submission again would
depend upon true interpretation of Section 306 and 307 of
the Code. Under Section 307 when pardon is tendered after
commitment has been made the legislative mandate is that the
pardon would be tendered on the same condition. The
expression "on the same condition" obviously refers to the
condition of tendering a pardon engrafted in Sub-section (1)
of Section 306, the said condition being the person
concerned on making a full and true disclosure of the whole
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of the circumstances within his knowledge relating to the
offence. Sub-section (4) of Section 306 cannot be held to be
a condition for tendering pardon. A combined reading of Sub-
section (4) of Section 306 and Section 307 would make it
clear that in a case exclusively triable by the Sessions
Court if an accused is tendered pardon and is taken as an
approver before commitment then compliance of sub-section
(4) of Section 306 becomes mandatory and non-compliance of
such mandatory requirements would vitiate the proceedings
but if an accused is tendered pardon after the commitment by
the Court to which the proceedings is committed in exercise
of powers under Section 307 then in such a case the
provision of Sub-section (4) of Section 306 are not
attracted. The procedural requirement under Sub-Section
(4)(a) of Section 306 to examine the accused after tendering
pardon cannot be held to be a condition of grant of pardon.
The case of Suresh Chandra Bhari etc. vs. State of Bihar
1995 Supp. (1) Supreme Court Cases 80, on which the learned
counsel for the appellants strongly relied upon deals with a
case where pardon had been tendered to an accused before the
commitment proceedings and the question was whether non-
compliance of Sub-section (4)(a) of Section 306 would
vitiate the trial. The Court held that the provision
contained in Clause (a) of Sub-section (4) of Section 306 is
of mandatory nature and, therefore, non-compliance of the
same would render an order of commitment illegal. It is no
doubt true, as contended by Mr. Muralidhar the learned
counsel appearing for the appellants, that the procedure
indicated in sub-section (4)(a) of Section 306 is intended
to provide a safeguard to an accused inasmuch as the
approver has to make a statement disclosing his evidence at
the preliminary stage before the committal order is made and
thereby accused becomes aware of the evidence against him
and further such evidence of an approver can be ultimately
shown as untrustworthy during the trial when the said
approver makes any contradictions or improvements of his
earlier version. But still when the legislature in Section
307 have made specific reference to only on "such
conditions" and not to the other procedures in Section 306
it would not be a rule of interpretation to hold that even
Sub-section (4)(a) of Section 306 would also be applicable
in such a case.
The decisions of this Court in the case of Iqbal Singh
vs. State (Delhi Administration) & Ors. 1978 (2) Supreme
Court Reports, 174, supports our conclusion, as aforesaid,
to a great extent. In this said case under the Criminal
Procedure Code, 1878 the question for consideration was that
when pardon had been tendered to a person at the stage of
investigation under Section 337(1) of the Code then a
Special Judge who had the power to take cognisance of
offence offence under Section 8(1) of the Criminal Law
Amendment Act 1952 would have no jurisdiction to take
cognisance and, therefore, charge sheet has to be filed
before a Magistrate. This contention had been advanced
because of Sub-section (2)(B) of Section 337 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure 1898. A contention has been advanced in
the said case that if a Magistrate takes cognisance of the
offence the approver will have to be examined as a witness
twice, once in the Court of the Magistrate and again in the
Court of Special Judge to whom the Magistrate sends the case
for trial but on the other hand if charge sheet is filed in
the Court of Special Judge itself then the approver is *
only once and this is discriminatory. This Court repelled
advanced on behalf of the accused and held :
"It is clear from the scheme of Section 337 that what is
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required is that a person who accepts a tender of pardon
must be examined as a witness at the different st ages of
the proceedings. Where, however, a Special Judge takes
cognizance of the case, the occasion for examing the
approver as a witness arises only once. It is true that in
such a case there would be no previous evidence of the
approver against which his evidence at the trail could be
tested, which would have been available to the accused had
the proceedings, be initiated in the court of a Magistrate
who under sub-section (2B) of section 337 of the Code is
required to send the case for trial to the special Judge
after examing the approver. But we do not find anything in
sub-section (2B) of Section 337 to suggest that it affect s
in any way the jurisdiction of the Special Judge to take
cognizance of an offence without the accused being committed
to him for trial. Sub-section (2B) was inserted in section
337 in 1955 by Amendment Act 26 of 1995. If by enacting sub-
section (2B) in 1995 the legislature sought to curb the
power given to the Special Judge by section 8(1) of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act, 1952, there is no reason why the
legislature should not have expressed its intention clearly.
Also, the fact that the approver’s evidence cannot be tested
against any previous statement does not seem to us to make
any material difference to the detriment of the accused
transgressing Article 14 of the Constitution. The special
Judge in any case will have to apply the well established
tests for the appreciation of the accomplice’s evidence."
In this view of the matter in the case in hand,
admittedly having been tendered after the case was committed
to the Court of Session question of compliance of Sub-
section (4)(a) of Section 306 does not arise and on that
score no invalidity is attached to the statement of the
approver.
A contention had been raised by Mr. Muralidhar, learned
counsel appearing for the appellants to the effect that
statement of the approver being exculpatory in nature and
his entire statement having revealed that he was merely a
bystander and was compelled to do something at the behest of
accused Devendran, the said evidence of the approver should
be rejected. In support of such competition reliance has
been placed on the decisions of this Court in the case of
Ravinder Singh vs. State of Haryana (1975) 3 SCC 742, State
of Punjab vs. Raj Kumar (1989) 1 SCC 696, Rampal Pithwa
Rahidas vs. state of Maharashtra 1994 Supp. (2) SCC 73. In
Ravindran’s case this Court has observed that :
An approver is a most unworthy
friend, if at all, and he having
bargained for his immunity, must
prove his worthiness for
credibility in Court. This test is
fulfilled, firstly if the story he
related involves him in the crime
and appears intrinsically to be a
natural and probable catalogue of
events that had taken place.
Secondly, once that hurdle is
crossed, the story given by the
approver so far as the accused on
trial is concerned, must implicate
him in such a manner as to give
rise to a conclusion of guilt
beyond reasonable doubt."
In Raj Kumar’s case this Court
held:-
"He evidence has been read by the
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counsel for the parties before us
and his evidence clearly indicates
that he attempted to suggested that
he did nothing. Neither he stated
that he participated in looting nor
in injuring or attacking the
deceased. Reading t this evidence
clearly indicates that he has
claimed to be a spectator at ever
movement but has not participated
at any stage. Apart from it the
initial story appears also to be
unnatural as according to him, he
did not know anyone of these
accused persons but a month before
the incident they took him into
confidence and told him to join
them. After reading the evidence of
the witness as whole apparently the
impression created is that the
version does not appear to be a
natural version. In this view of
the matter, in our opinion, the
testimony is not such which
inspires confidence."
In Rampal Pithwa’s case this Court
observed:-
"From all the attendant
circumstances, we are satisfied
that the approver Ramcharan is not
a reliable witness; his arrest was
intrinsically unnatural and his
self-confessed participation in the
crime without taking any active
part in it is unacceptable. The
approver has claimed to be a
spectator of every fact and of
every moment but asserted that he
did not participate in the assault
at any stage and remained at a
distance taking care of the clothes
of some of the co-accused. His
statement is almost of an
exculpatory nature. His statement
as a whole does not inspire
confidence. His story is not worth
of credence. We find ourselves
unable to place any reliance on his
untrustworthy and unreliable
evidence."
All these aforesaid three cases deal with the question
as to what extent a Court can rely upon the evidence of an
approver. Whether the evidence of an approver can be relied
upon by a Court would depend upon the facts and
circumstances of the case. As has been indicated by this
Court in the case of Suresh Chandra (supra) that when
heinous crime is committed in a manner leaving no clue or
any trace is available for its detection, pardon is granted
to one of the accused persons for apprehending other
offenders and for production of the evidence which other is
unobtainable. This Court held :-
"The dominant object being that the offenders of the
and grave offences do not go unpunished, the Legislature in
its wisdom considered it necessary to introduce Section 306
and confine its operation to cases mentioned in it. The
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object of Section 306 therefore is to allow pardon in cases
where heinous offence is alleged to have been committed by
several persons so that with the aid of the evidence of the
person granted pardon the offence may be brought home to the
rest. The basis of the tender of pardon is not the extent of
the culpability of the person to whom pardon is granted, but
the principle is to prevent the escape of the offenders from
punishment in heinous offences for lack of evidence. There
can therefore be no objection against tender of pardon to an
accomplice simply because in his confession, he does no
implicate himself to the same ex tent as the other accused
because all that Section 306 requires is that pardon may be
tendered to any person believed to involved directly or
indirectly in or privy to an offence."
Bearing in mind the aforesaid principle and on going
through the evidence of the approver we are not in a
position to hold that the said evidence is entirely of
exculpatory nature. The approver’s evidence indicates that
he did participate in the crime though under persuation and
threat of other persons but in the matter of killing three
persons only accused Devendran played the major role. Yet
the statement of the approver cannot be held to be of purely
of exculpatory nature and on that score the evidence
be excluded from consideration, particularly when he
indicated in his evidence that he brought a bicycle from a
cycle shop took accused no, 2 on the cycle and then took
accused no. 3 on the cycle to the place of occurrence,
climbed up and reached the chimney of the house. tied the
rope to the bricks of the chimney through which he alongwith
others got down, room the first victim, a woman, to the next
room, went away through the first floor of the house
carrying jewels which they had collected and received two
golden bangles. These acts on the part of the approver
indicate that he participated in the commission of the
offence though not to the same extent as accused Devendran
and as such, the statement cannot be aside to be exculpatory
nature. Mr. Muralidhar, learned counsel appearing for the
appellants further contended that the approver’s evidence at
any rate has not been corroborated in the material
particulars from any independent source connecting each of
the accused persons, and therefore, the said evidence cannot
relied upon. There cannot be any dispute with tie
proposition that ordinarily an approver’s statement has to
be corroborated in material particulars. Certain clinching
features of involvement disclosed directly to an accused by
a approver must be tested qua ea ch accused from independent
credible evidence and on being satisfied the evidence of an
approver can be accepted. What is the extent of
corroboration that is required before the acceptance of the
evidence of the approver would depend upon the facts and
circumstances of the case. The corroboration required,
however, must be in material particular connecting each of
the accused with the offence. In other words the evidence of
the approver implicating several accused persons in
commission of the offence could not only be corroborated
generally but also qua each accused. But that does not mean
that there should be independent corroboration of every
particular circumstances from and independent source. All
that is required is that there must be some additional
evidence rendering it probable that the story of the
accomplice is true. Corroboration also could be both by
direct or circumstantial evidence. (see Ramanlal Mohanlal
Pandava vs. The State of Bomaby-AIR 1960 SC 961: Tribhuvan
Nath vs. The State of Maharashtra - AIR 1973 SC 450; Swaran
Singh vs. The State of Punjab - 1957 Supreme Court Reports
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953; Ram Narain vs. State of Rajasthan (1973) 3 Supreme
Court Cases 805; and Balwant Kaur vs. Union Territory of
Chandigarh - 1988 (1) Supreme Court Cases 1) But we need not
examine this question in greater detail to find whether the
evidence of the approver gets corroboration from any other
evidence since in view of our interpretation of the
provision of Section 306 and 307 of the Code and in view of
our conclusion that after commitment of the proceedings the
Session Judge had no power to remit the matter for grant of
pardon to the Chief Judicial Magistrate and the order of the
Chief Judicial Magistrate tendering pardon is without
jurisdiction not curable under Section 460 (g) of the Code,
the evidence of the approver cannot be relied upon by the
prosecution in the present case.
We may notice the arguments advanced by Mr. Mohan.
learned counsel appearing for the State, that the conviction
and sentence against the appellants should not be interfered
with in view of the provisions of Section 465 of the Code,
inasmuch as there has been failure of justice. WE are unable
to accept this contention. Section 465 of the Code is the
residuary section intended to cure any error, omission or
irregularity committed by a Court of competent jurisdiction
in course of trial through accident or inadvertence, or even
an illegality consisting in the infraction of any provisions
of law. The sole object of the Section is to secure justice
by preventing the invalidation of a trail already held, on
the ground of technical breaches of any provisions in the
Code causing no prejudice to the accused. But by no stretch
of imagination the aforesaid provisions can be attracted to
a situation where a Court having no jurisdiction under the
Code does something or passes an order in contravention of
the mandatory provisions of the Code. In view of our
interpretation already made, that after a criminal
proceeding is committed to a Court of Sessions it is only
the Court of Sessions which has the jurisdiction to tender
pardon to an accused and the Chief Judicial Magistrate does
not posses any such jurisdiction, it would be impossible to
hold that such tender of pardon by the Chief, Judicial
Magistrate can be accepted and the evidence of the approver
thereafter can be considered by attracting the provisions of
Section 465 of the Code. The aforesaid provision cannot be
applied to a patent defect of jurisdiction. The again it is
not a case of reversing the sentence or order passed by a
Court of competent jurisdiction but is a case where only a
particular item of evidence has been taken out of
consideration as that evidence of the so-called approver has
been held by us to be not a legal evidence since pardon had
been tendered by a Court of incompetent jurisdiction. In our
opinion, to such a situation the provisions of Section 465
cannot be attracted at all. It is true, that procedures are
intended to subserve the ends of justice and undue emphasis
on mere technicalities which are not vital or important may
frustrate the ends of justice. The Courts, therefore, are
required to consider the gravity of irregularity and whether
the same has caused a failure of justice. To tender pardon
by a Chief Judicial Magistrate cannot be held to be a mere
case of irregularity nor can it be said that there has been
failure of justice. It is a case of total lack of
jurisdiction, and consequently the follow up action on
account of such an order of a Magistrate without
jurisdiction cannot be taken into consideration at all. In
this view of the matter the contention of Mr. Mohan, leaned
counsel appearing for the State in this regard has to be
rejected.
The next question which requires consideration,
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therefore, is excluding evidence of the approver from
consideration whether prosecution case can be held to be
proved beyond reasonable doubt?.
The other evidence pressed into service by the
prosecution is the evidence of PW2, PW3, PW4 and PW5 and the
recovery of stolen articles belonging to PW4 from different
accused persons and identification of those article by PW 4.
That apart certain incriminating material recovered on the
basis of information given by the accused while in custody
have been pressed into service by the persecution for
establishing the charge beyond resonable doubt. PW2 is the
girl whose marriage ceremony was to be performed and it is
for her marriage parents had gone to Madurai for purchase of
marriage article. According to her evidence she was sleeping
in the Puja room whereas the two decreased grand-mothers
were sleeping in the hall. It was about 2.30 a.m. on
24.11.1992 she heard some sound and so she went to her
senior grand-mother but the grand-mother asked her not to
worry as junior grand-mother went to observe and advised her
to sleep. Sometime thereafter she heard some galloping and
so when woke up, she then found that 4 outsiders are there
and two of them were strangulating the senior grand-mother.
She further found that two others gagged the junior grand-
mother and then they threatened PW2 that if she raises any
alarm she will be shot. According to he all the accused
persons were wearing masks and one of them was holding
rifle MO-1. The second accused was holding a pistol and the
third one holing a rod while the fourth one was holding a
bag. It is the further evidence that when they demanded the
key she replied that she does no possess the same and the
grand-mother might be having it. The accused persons then
removed the key from the bag of the grand-mother and then
opened the bureau and removed cash and jewels from the blue
colour box. She also stated that she herself gave out the
chain, locket, the pair of gold rings to the accused
persons. At that point of time she heard the noise of the
jeep and so she ran away towards the front gate. Seeing her
father she told that dacoits are inside and warned her
father not to go in but the driver Nagarajan and her father
PW5 went inside the house and they were followed by her
brother and Mohan. While she stayed outside when head the
sound of firing of rifle and she saw her father coming out
bleeding. Thereafter her elder brother and neighour Mohan
came and informed that two grand-mothers as well as driver
nagarajan have died. This evidence of PW2 establishes the
fact of dacoity having been committed in the house and the
fact of murder of her two grand-mothers by way of
strangulation by four accused persons throught the witness
is unable to identify as to which of the accused person
strangulated the elder grand-mother and which of the accused
person strangulated the younger grand-mother. She has been
cross-examined at great length by the accused persons but we
do not find anything that has been brought about in cross
examination to impeach the veracity of her statement. She
being an inmate of the house and being present at the time
of the commission of the offence had the full opportunity to
notice the manner in which the incident occurred and vide
account of the same has been given by her. Since the accused
persons were not known to her she has not been able to
identify which of the accused person strangulated the senior
grand-mother and which of the accused person strangulated
the junior grand-mother. PW3 had gone with his father to
Madurai for making some marriage purchases. According to him
they reached the village at about 2.00 a.m. and hardly they
had gone inside after getting down from the jeep his sister
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PW2 ran out of the house and intimated them not to go inside
as thieven are there. But notwithstanding such warning the
driver Nagarajan followed by his father went inside the
house and he followed them. It was at that time he heard the
blasting sound of the revolver and Nagarajan came and fell
down in the hall. His father PW5 also sustained an injury
and he came out by holding his chest. He then found both his
grand-mothers lying dead and further found driver Nagarajan
lying dead in the main hall. He also found Almiriahs to be
kept open. So he came out and told PW2 about the entire
incident. His evidence establishes the commission of offence
of robbery in the house and three people found dead in the
house one of whom on account of gun shot but neither he had
seen the actual assault given by anyone of the accused
persons on any of the decreased nor had seen the very
presence of the accused persons in the house. But all the
same, his evidence corroborates the evidence of PW4 that was
grand-mothers were found dead inside the house and it
further establishes that the driver Nagarajan who entered
into the house after getting down from the jeep was shot at
by the accused persons and ultimately he died on account of
such gun shot injury. PW 4 is the mother of PW2 who had gone
to Madurai for the marriage shopping. She corroborates the
evidence of PW3 to the effect that her daughter PW2 came
running from the house as soon as the jeep reached the house
and warned them from entering into the house as thieves are
there inside. While she was standing outside with her
daughter PW2, the driver Nagarajan and her husband PW5 as
well as the son PW3 entered inside the house and at that
point of time sound of gun blast was heard from inside the
house. It is further evidence that she found her husband
coming out of the house holding his chest and she was tole
that the thieves haves shot at him. While she was holding
her husband who had been injured and was preparing to take
her husband to the hospital she was informed about the death
of the two ladies as well as the death of the driver
Nagarajan. She was also able to identify the ornaments which
were recovered from the possession of the accused persons.
He evidence, therefore, establishes the fact of commission
of offence in the house but she had not sen the assailants
who are responsible for the death of two old ladies as well
as the death of driver Nagarajan.
PW5 is the owner of the house who had gone to Madurai
for marriage shopping. He states in his evidence that when
they were getting down from the jeep at about 2.00 a.m. his
daughter Priya came running from inside the house and stated
"Daddy thieves are committing theft in the house. They have
snatched the jewels from me by tying may hands forcibly." he
then attempted to go inside the house to find out what has
happened but his driver Nagarajan ahead and his wife and
daughter prevented him from going inside. He however, could
not resist and rushed inside the house following Nagarajan
and then switched on the light one the southern side. Hardly
he attempted to proceed to the room where his mother was
sleeping gun shoot sound was heard and then Nagarajan’s
shout that he had been shot. While he was proceeding towards
Nagarajan he also received gun shot injury. Then he came
back to the jeep where he found his wife and son and then he
was carried go the Government hospital at Cumbum. There at
Cumbum hospital he was advised to go to madurai and so he
was taken to Madurai and was admitted in the Meenakshi
Mission Hospital. Doctors at Meenakshi Mission Hospital and
tole him that bullets are there inside in a dangerous area
near the heart and it cannot be operated upon their at
Madurai. So he was taken to G. Kuppusamy Hospital at
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Coimbatore and there bullets were removed by operating upon
him. While he was in Meenakshi Mission Hospital at Madurai
he had been examined b the Police and he had narrated the
occurrence to the Police. His evidence, therefore,
establish, the fact that on the fateful night while he was
trying to get into the house to find out what all has been
stolen and what incident had happened right in his front his
driver Nagarajan received the gun shot injury and then he
also received the bullet injury which could be removed only
in the Hospital at Coimbatore. In addition to the aforesaid
evidence of the four inmates of the house with regard to the
occurrence in question, the evidence of the Investigating
Officer PW-25 who at the relevant time was the Inspector of
Police Chinnamannur Circle clearly indicates that on
reaching the place of occurrence he found the dead bodies of
two ladies as well as the dead body of the deceased
Nagarajan and the prepared the Inquest Report in respect of
the three dead bodies. He also made some seizure from the
place of occurrence and then examined the witness and
recorded their statements under Section 161 Cr.P.C. The post
mortem examination conducted by Dr. N. Manimohan PW-10 on
the body of Saraswati Ammal clearly indicated that she died
due to strangulation and gagging, Similarly the evidence of
Dr. R. Anandan PW-11 who had conducted the post mortem
examination on the dead body of Deivammal the other lady
establishes the fact that she died due to strangulation of
the neck and smothering. This evidence fully corroborates
the evidence of PW-2 the young girl that two of her grand-
mothers were strangulated by the accused persons. The
evidence of PW-9 the Assistant Medical Officer, Government
Hospital, Cumbum who had conducted the post mortem
examination on the dead body of Nagarajan clearly indicates
that said Nagarajan died on account of injuries sustained by
the shooting of revolver which fact corroborates the
evidence of PW-5 to the fact that while Nagarajan was
proceeding inside the house he received the bullet injury
but of course, he has not been able to see the assailants.
From the aforesaid prosecution evidence it si clearly
established that on the relevant date of occurrence at mid-
night four persons entered into the house of PW-5, one of
them strangulated two ladies while other persons were
holding or gagging those ladies and then received the key by
show of force and opening the Almiriah, took away the
valuables and also snatched ornaments from the person of PW-
2 and finally when the owner of the house PW-5 arrived from
Madhurai and his driver Nagarajan rushed into the house he
was shot dead and PW-5 who was closely following also
received bullet injuries which could be removed only by
operating at the Hospital at Coimbatore.
Let us now examine the recovered of the ornaments and
other incriminating materials from different accused persons
which have been identified by the inmates of the house to
belong to them.
The pistol MO-2 was lying in front of the house of PW-
20 and was seized under Mazahar Exhibit P-30 the trigger of
the pistol had been welded with bras powder. PW-7 in his
evidence stated the he knew accused Devendran. It is he who
had brought one pistol and requested him to weld the trigger
and said PW-7 had done the welding and thereafter Devendran
had taken away the pistol giving him Rs.15/-. He also
identified the portion of MO2 stating that it is this
welding he had done on the pistol. In his cross-examination
he categorically stated that he had been able to identify
the pistol by seeing welded part of the trigger of the
pistol. During search of the house of accused Devendran on
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26.11.1992 pellets MO75 series, Ball beareaus (Paulrus
pellets), empty cartridges MO 78, paper corks of bullet
cartridges MO 93, empty cartridges MO 79 which could be used
in 12 bore gun were all seized under Exhibit P-31. The
prosecution has further been able to establish that the
pellet which was removed from the body of PW-5 are similar
in size as pellets MO 72 series recovered from the house of
acccused Devendran. It was further established MO 78 seized
from the house of accused Devendran as well as empty
cartridges seized under Mazahar 28 are similar in nature.
The Ballistic expert PW-24 in his evidence stated that while
conducting test on the pistol with dummy rounds he observed
the similarity of the marking of the earlier firing and the
ultimately came to the conclusion that MO 79 empty
cartridges must have been fired by using the pistol MO 2.
The report of the ballistic expert is Exhibit P24. MO-2 was
seized under Mazahar Exhibit P37 on the basis of the
statement made by accused Devendran while in custody. The
aforesaid evidence unequivocally indicated that the pistol
which was used for shooting driver Nagarajan and injured PW-
5 was the pistol belonging to the accused Devendran and the
empty cartridges recover from the house of Devendras also
corroborates to the aforesaid conclusion. The jewellery
belonging to the informant were re covered on the basis of
the statement of accused Devendras are MOs 16 to 12, MOs 24
to 28 and MOs 30 to 59. PW 4 not only identified those
jewellery but also stated theat these ornaments had been
taken away by the culprits from her house. Similarly jewels
MOs 13, 14 and 15 were seized from accused no. 3 which the
culprits had snatched from PW2 and MO 29 was seized from
accused no. 2 under Mazahar Exhibit P 35 and PW4 identified
the same to belong to the family and had been stolen in the
course of dacoity. The question for consideration would be
whether the recoveries of the jewelleries belonging to PW-5
from different accused persons at their instance while in
custody and the recovery of some of the weapons of assault
from the house of different accused persons would be
sufficient to arrive at a conclusion that it is these
accused persons who are the perpetrators of the murders
which took place in the house of PW-5 on the fateful night
and it is these accused persons who committed murder as well
as dacoity in the house and left the place with the booty.
This conclusion can be arrived at only by taking recourse to
the provisions of Section 114 of the Evidence Act under
which the Court is entitled to presume existence of certain
facts. Under Illustration (a) to Section 114 the Court may
presume that a man who is in possession of stolen goods
after the theft, is either the their or has received the
goods knowing them to be stolen, unless he can account for
his possession. From the prosecution evidence, as already
discussed it must be filed that the prosecution has been
able to prove beyond reasonable doubt that the commission of
murders and the robbery formed part of one transaction which
has been fully unfolded through the evidence of PW-2 and in
such situtation the recovered of the stolen properties from
the house of some of the accused persons and at their
instance and no explanation from those accused persons, on
being questioned under Section 313 Cr. P.C. reasonably
points to the guilt of those accused persons establishing
the fact that it is they who committed the murders in the
house and then committed the robbery and left the scene of
occurrence. Whether a presumption under Section 114
Illustration (a) of the Evidence Act should be drawn in a
given situation is a matter which depends on the
evidence and circumstances of its recovery, the intervening
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period between the date of occurrence and the date of
recovery, the explanation of the persons concerned from whom
the recovery is made are all factors which are to be taken
into consideration in arriving at a decision. In the case of
Baiju vs. State of Madhya Pradesh, AIR 1978 Supreme Court
522, this Court had held that the prosecution having succeed
in proving beyond any doubt that the commission of the
murders and robbery formed part of one transaction and the
recent and unexplained possession of the stolen property by
the appellant justified the presumption that it was he and
no one else, who had committed the murders and the robbery.
In the said case the offence had been committed on the night
of January 20 and 21, 1975 and the stolen property was
recovered from the house of the appellant on January
28,1975.
In the cases of Shivappa and other vs. The State of
Mysore-AIR 1971 SC 196 the same question was considered by
this Court. The Court had said "If there is other evidence
to connect an accused with the crime itself, however, small,
the finding of the stolen property with him is a piece of
evidence which connects him further with the crime. There is
then no question of presumption. The evidence strengthen the
other evidence already against him. It is only when the
accused cannot be connected with the crime except by reason
of possession of the fruits of crime that the presumption
may be drawn. In what circumstances the one presumption or
the other may be drawn, it is not necessary to state
categorically in this case. It all depends upon the
circumstances under which the discovery of the fruits of
crime are made with a particular accused. It has been stated
one more than one occasion that if the gap of time is too
large. the presumption that the accused was concerned with
the crime itself gets weakened. The presumption is stronger
when the discovery of the fruits of crime is made
immediately after the crime is committed. The reason is
obvious. Disposal of the fruits of crime requires the
finding of a person ready to receive them and the shortness
of time, the nature of the property which is disposed, of,
that is to say, its quantity and its character determine
whether the person who had the goods in his possession
received them from another or was himself the thief or the
dacoit. In some cases there may be other elements which may
point to the way as to how the presumption may be drawn.
They differ from case to case .." In the aforesaid case the
recoveries had been made within 5 days of the date of
occurrence and therefore, the Court ultimately came to the
conclusion that the High Court was right drawing the
presumption that the person concerned are dacoit themselves.
In Gulab Chand vs. State of Madhya Pradesh (1995) 3SCC
574, this Court considered at length the law relating to
Section 114, Illustration (a) of the Evidence Act and the
circumstances under which the presumption can be drawn. it
was held by Court that no hard and fast rule can be laid
down as to what inference should be drawn from certain
circumstance. It was further held that if the ornaments in
possession of the deceased are found in possession of the
person soon after the murder, a presumption of guilt may be
permitted. But if several months had expired in the
interval, the presumption cannot be permitted to be drawn
having regard to the circumstances of the case. The Court
approved the earlier decision of this Court in Earabhadrappa
vs. State of Karnataka (1983) 2 SCC 330 wherein it was held
that the nature of presumption and illustration (a) under
Section 114 of the Evidence Act must depend upon the nature
of the evidence adduced. No fixed time-limited can be laid
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down to determine whether possession is recent or otherwise
and each case must be judged on its own facts. The question
as to what amounts to recent possession sufficient to
justify the presumption of guilt varies according as the
stolen article is or is not, calculated to pass readily from
hand to hand. If the stolen article were such as were not
likely to pass readily from hand to hand, the period of one
years that elapsed cannot be said to be too long
particularly when the appellant had been absconding during
that period. s
In the case of Gautam Maroti Umale vs. State of
Maharashtra- 1994 Supp. (3) SCC 326, on the other hand this
Court held mere recovery of ornaments belonging to the
deceased at the instance of the accused did not connect him
with the murder and at the most he can be convicted for
possession of stolen property under Section 411 IPC. To the
same effect is the judgment of this Court in Union Territory
of Goa vs. Bea Ventura D’Sourza and another - 1993 Supp (3)
SCC 305. Bearing in mind the principle laid down in the
aforesaid cases and on examining the facts and circumstances
of the present cases which have been established by the
prosecution beyond reasonable doubt there did cannot be any
hesitation in coming to the conclusion that the prosecution
case as against Devendran under Section 302 has been
provided beyond reasonable doubt. The evidence of PW7
indicating that Devendran had brought the pistol MO 2 to get
trigger welded and getting the same welded by PW-7 Devendran
had taken away the pistol, the identification of the pistol
MO 2 by said PW-7, the recovery of pellets MO 75 series from
the house of accused Devendran two days after the fateful
incident i.e. on 26.11.1992, the seizure of empty cartridges
and ball beareaus (Paulrus pellets), the recovery of similar
pellets from the body of PW-5 as were recovered from the
house of accused Devendran, the evidence of Ballistic expert
PW-24 that the MO-2 must have been fired which is apparent
from the examination of empty cartridges, the jewelleries
MOs 16 to 23, MOs 24 to 28 and MOs 30 to 59 belonging to the
informant were recovered on the basis of the statement of
accused Devendran and those jewelleries were identified by
PW-4 to the effect that those ornaments had been taken away
by the culprits from her house are sufficient to raise the
presumption under Section 114 of Illustration (a) of the
Evidence Act and the conclusion becomes irrestible that is
accused Devendran who committed the murders in the house PW-
5 on 24.11.1992 and thereafter left the place with the
booties and as such the prosecution case against accused
Devendran under Section 302 IPC must be held to be proved
beyond reasonable doubt. But so far as the two other accused
persons are concerned the only items of evidence is the
recovery of some of the jewelleries after more than two
months of the occurrence. On such recoveries alone after two
months of the occurrence it will not be safe to draw a
presumption for holding that they are also parties of the
offence of murder committed in the house of PW-5. It is no
doubt true that PW-2 in her evidence had indicated that
there were four persons who committed the offence in their
house but said PW-2 has not been able to identify the
culprits. It will, therefore, be wholly unsafe to convict
the two other accused persons in the charge of murder by
taking recourse to presume under Section 114 of the Evidence
Act for the mere recovery of some of the ornaments belonging
to the informant after two months of the occurrence. In that
view of the matter the conviction of two other accused
persons for the charge of murder cannot be sustained and is
accordingly set aside, but instead they are convicted under
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Section 411 IPC and are sentenced to rigorous imprisonment
of three years each.
Coming now to the question of the sentence for
conviction of accused Devendran under Section 302, as has
been stated earlier, he has been sentenced to death by the
learned Session Judge and the said sentence has been
affirmed by the High Court. From the prosecution evidence it
is apparent that there was no premeditated plan to kill any
person and the main objective was to commit robbery. In
course of the incident as stated by PW2 when the two old
ladies got up and rushed towards culprits one of them
strangulated them one after the other. The post mortem
report also indicated that the death of the two ladies are
on account of strangulation. The learned Session Judge
awarded death sentence to accused Devendran on the ground
that as soon as the driver Nagarajan entered into the house
said Devendran shot the gun which hit Nagarajan and he died.
This itself cannot be held to be sufficient to hold that it
is an act of an depraved mind. The number of persons did in
the incident is not the determinative factor for deciding
whether the extreme penalty of death could be awarded or
not. On the evidence of PW2 as well as the evidence of PW5
it is difficult to hold that the death of the persons were
either diabolical, ghastly or gruesome.
In Machhi Singh and others vs. State of Punjab - (1983)
3 Supreme Court Cases 470, the three judge of this Court
consideration the Constitution Bench decision in Bachan
Singh vs. State of Punjab - 1980 (2) SCC 684 and came to
hold that where there is no proof of extreme culpability,
the extreme penalty need not be given. This Court also
further observed that the extreme penalty of death may be
given only in the rarest of rare cases where aggravating
circumstances are such that the extreme penalty meets the
ends of justice. In Suresh vs. State of U.P. - 1981 (2) SCC
569, the conviction was based upon the evidence of a child
witness and Chandrachud, C.J. speaking for the Court held
that it will not be safe to impose extreme penalty of death
in a conviction based on the deposition of a child. I was
further observed that the extreme sentence cannot seek its
main support from the evidence of a child witness and it is
not safe enough to act upon such deposition, even if true,
for putting out a life. In Raja Ram Yadav and others vs.
State of Bihar (1996) 9 SCC 287, this Court came to hold
that a gruesome and cruel incident did take place and yet
did not think it appropriate to affirm a sentence of death
and commuted to life imprisonment. It would be appropriate
to quote the observation of the Court from the aforesaid
case -
"We feel that both the murders had been committed in a
premeditated and calculated manner with extreme cruelty and
brutality, for which normally sentence of death is wholly
justified but in the special facts of the case, it will not
be proper to award extreme sentence of death."
In one of the most recent case in the case of Mukund @
Kundu Pradesh vs. State of Madhya Pradesh - 1997 (3) Scale
769, this Court while upholding the conviction of the
appellant for causing the murder of two persons set aside
the sentence of death on the ground that it was not one of
the rarest of the rare case. Bearing in mind the ratio of
the aforesaid cases it may be seen that since the evidence
of an approver has been taken out of consideration the
conviction of appellant Devendran under Section 302 has been
upheld on the basis of the evidence of PW2, PW5 and the
recovery of the pistol which was used for the commission of
murder from the house of said Devendran as well as the
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recovered of ornaments and other jewelleries belonging to
the informant recovered from the house of Devendran on the
basis of his statement, while in custody and those
jewelleries being identified by PW 4. The aforesaid evidence
by no stretch of imagination beings the case in hand to be
one of the rarest of rare cases where the extreme penalty of
death can be awarded. Accordingly, though we uphold the
conviction of accused Devendran under Section 302 IPC but we
set aside the sentence of death awarded by the learned
Sessions Judge and affirmed by the High Court and instead
commute the same by imprisonment for life. So far as the
conviction of the appellants under Section 120B IPC is
concerned, in view of our conclusion arrived at and the
evidence of the approver being out of consideration the said
charge cannot be said to have been established beyond
reasonable doubt and accordingly all the appellants are
acquitted from the said charge.
So far as the conviction under Section 449 IPC is
concerned, for the same reasonings the conviction of
appellants R. Pandian and R. Thungamalati cannot be
sustained and they are acquitted of the said charge. But
accused Devendran must be found guilty of the said charge
and accordingly his conviction and sentence thereunder would
remain unaltered.
So far as the conviction under Section 326/34 IPC is
concerned, on the conclusion arrived at by us accused R.
Pandian and R. Thungamalai cannot be convicted thereunder
and it must be held that the prosecution failed to establish
the charge beyond reasonable doubt and they are accordingly
acquitted from the said charge. But the case against accused
Devendran must be held to be proved beyond reasonable doubt
and, therefore, he is convicted under Section 326 IPC and
sentenced to undergo rigorous imprisonment for three years.
The sentence against accused Devendran directed to run
concurrently.
These appeals are disposed of accordingly.
Before we part with this case we must keep on record
our appreciation for the invaluable service rendered by Shri
Muralidhar, learned counsel who appeared for the appellants
as amicus curiae and by his sincere and hard work put forth
all possible arguments for a correct interpretation of the
provisions of Section 306 and 307 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure. The analysis made by him on the question of law
as well as evidence on record became an asset for delivering
this judgment.