Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SANWAT SINGH & OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF RAJASTHAN
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
09/12/1960
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
CITATION:
1961 AIR 715 1961 SCR (3) 120
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1963 SC 200 (17)
E 1965 SC 26 (4,6,14)
R 1965 SC 257 (8)
R 1966 SC1775 (4)
RF 1967 SC1412 (5)
R 1971 SC 460 (13)
RF 1971 SC1977 (11)
F 1972 SC 116 (22)
RF 1972 SC 622 (28,32)
R 1972 SC2020 (7)
F 1972 SC2679 (8,9)
R 1973 SC 55 (8)
RF 1973 SC 399 (3)
RF 1973 SC1204 (7)
RF 1973 SC2241 (5,6)
F 1973 SC2443 (19)
RF 1973 SC2622 (7)
R 1974 SC 286 (5)
F 1974 SC 606 (7,9)
R 1974 SC 902 (26)
R 1979 SC 387 (9)
R 1979 SC 391 (12)
R 1986 SC 606 (15)
R 1988 SC2154 (10)
ACT:
Appeal-Against acquittal-Principles to be followed-"Sub-
stantial and compelling reason"--Meaning and scope of-Power
of Court-Constitution of India, Art. 136.
HEADNOTE:
There were two rival factions in a certain village one con-
sisting of Rajputs and the other of cultivators. On a
particular festival day both the groups went to a temple for
worship and cultivators who reached the temple first
occupied a place therein which was usually occupied by
Rajputs. Subsequently Rajputs arrived and resented the
occupation of the sitting place by the cultivators. They
shifted to a short distance and after holding a brief
conference came back to the temple and attacked the
cultivators with guns, swords and lathis as a result of
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which several persons were injured and two were killed. 43
persons alleged to have taken part in the rioting were put
up for trial before the Sessions judge for having committed
offences under s. 302 read with s. 149 and s. 148 of the
Indian Penal Code. The Sessions judge held that a common
object on the part of the accused to kill the cultivators
had not been established and that it had also not been
proved beyond reasonable doubt that the accused were guilty
of a particular offence. On these findings the Sessions
judge acquitted all the accused. On appeal the High Court
after examining the entire evidence found some of the
accused guilty of culpable homicide not amounting to murder
under S. 304 read with s. 149 and s. 148 of the Indian Penal
Code and sentenced them to various terms of imprisonment.
The appeal in respect of some other accused was dismissed as
no case had been made out against them beyond any reasonable
doubt On appeal by special leave against the conviction and
sentence by the High Court,
Held, that the words "substantial and compelling reasons"
for setting aside an order of acquittal used by this Court
in its decisions were intended to convey the idea that an
appellate court shall not only bear in mind the principles
laid down by the Privy Council in Sheo Swarup’s case but
must also give its clear reasons for coming to the
conclusion that the order of acquittal was wrong.
The following results emanate from a discussion of the case
law on appeals against acquittal:-
(1)an appellate court has full power to review the
evidence upon which the order of acquittal is founded; (2)
the principles
121
laid down in Sheo Swarup’s case afford a correct guide for
the appellate court’s approach to a case disposing of such
an appeal; (3) the different phraseology used in the
judgments of this Court, such as (1) "substantial and
compelling reasons", (II) "good and sufficiently cogent
reasons", and (III) "strong reasons", are not intended to
curtail the undoubted power of an appellate Court in an
appeal against acquittal to review the entire evidence and
to come to its own conclusion, but in doing so it should not
only consider every matter on record having a bearing on the
questions of fact and the reasons given by the Court below
in support of its order of acquittal in arriving at a
conclusion on those facts, but should express the reasons in
its judgment, which led it to hold that the acquittal was
not justified.
Sheo Swarup v. King Emperor, (1934) L. R. 61 I. A. 398, con-
sidered and followed.
Nur Mohammad v. Emperoy, A.I.R. 1945 P.C. 151, Surajpal
Singh v. The State, [1952] S.c.R. 193, Ajmer Singh v. The
State of Punjab, [1953] S.C.R‘ 418, Puran v. State of
Punjab, A.I.R. 1953 S.C. 459, C. M. narayan v. State of
Travancore-Cochin, A.I.R. 1953 S.C. 478, Tulsiram Kanu v.
The State, A.I.R. 1954 S.C. 1, Madan Mohan Singh’s case,
A.I.R. 1954 S.C. 637, Zwinglee Ariel v. State of U. P.,
A.I.R. 1954 S.C. 15, Rao Shiv Bahadur Singh v. State of
Vixdhya Pradesh, A.I.R. 1954 S.C. 322, S. A. A. Biyabani v.
The State of Madras, A.I. R. 1954 S.C. 645, Aher Raja Khima
v. The State of Saurashtra, [1955] 2 S.C.R. 1285, Bhagwan
Das v. The State of Rajasthan, A.I.R. 1957 S.C. 589 and
Balbir Singh v. State of Punjab, A.I.R. 1957 S.C. 216,
discussed.
The High Court approached the instant case from a correct
perspective and gave definite findings on a consideration of
the entire evidence, and in so doing it did not depart from
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any of the principles laid down by the Privy Council in Sheo
Swarup’s case and also gave reasons for holding that the
acquittal was not justified.
Abdul Gani v. State of M. P., A.I.R. 1954 S.C. 31, referred
to.
Although the powers of this Court under Art. 136 of the
Constitution are very wide, interference is not permitted
unless "by disregard to the forms of legal process or some
violation of the principles of natural justice or otherwise,
substantial and grave injustice has been done," on questions
of fact the practice of this Court is not to interfere
except in exceptional cases when the finding is such that it
shocks the conscience of this Court,
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 119 of
1958.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
July 29, 1957, of the Rajasthan High Court, Jodhpur, in
Criminal Appeal No. 42 of 1954.
16
122
B. L. Kohli and C. L. Sareen, for the appellants.
S. K. Kapur and D. Gupta, for the respondent.
1960. December 9. The Judgment of the Court was
delivered by
SUBBA RAO, J.-This is an appeal by special leave against the
conviction and sentence by the High Court of Judicature for
Rajasthan at Jodhpur of the 9 appellants under s. 304, read
with s. 149, and s. 148 of the Indian Penal Code.
The 9 appellants, along with 34 other persons, were accused
before the Sessions Judge, Merta. Briefly stated the case
of the prosecution was as follows: There were two factions
in village Harnawa-one consisting of Rajputs and other of
the cultivators of the village. Admittedly there were
disputes between these two factions in respect of certain
fields. At about 3-30 p.m. on October 31, 1951, the day
after Diwali, popularly known as Ram Ram day, both the
groups went to a temple called Baiji-kathan. The
cultivators went first to the temple and sat in the place
which was usually occupied by the Rajputs. Subsequently
when the Rajputs went there, they found their usual sitting
place occupied by the cultivators and took that as an insult
to them. Though they were invited by the pujari to sit in
some other place, they refused to do so and went to a banyan
tree which was at a short distance from the temple. There
they held a brief conference and then returned to the temple
armed with guns, swords and lathies. The Rajputs fired a
few shots at the cultivators and also beat them with swords
and lathies. As a result, 16 of the cultivators received
injuries and of these 6 received gun-shot injuries, of which
two persons, namely, Deena and Deva, succumbed to the
injuries. Out of the remaining 14 injured persons, 3
received grievous injuries and the rest simple ones. Forty-
three persons, alleged to have taken part in the rioting,
were put up for trial before the Sessions Judge,, Merta, for
having committed offences under s. 302, read with s. 149,
and s. 148 of the Indian Penal Code. Five of the accused
admitted their presence at the scene of
123
occurrence but pleaded that after they had made their
customary offerings at the temple and when they were
returning they were attacked by the cultivators. Others
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pleaded alibi.
The learned Sessions Judge held that it had not been
established that the accused had a common object to kill the
cultivators and that it had also not been proved beyond any
reasonable doubt that any of the accused was guilty of a
particular offence. On these findings, he acquitted all the
accused.
On appeal the learned Judges of the High Court found that
the accused were members of an unlawful assembly, that they
were animated by a common object of beating the cultivators
and that further out of the 43 accused it had been clearly
established that the appellants, who are 9 in number, took
part in the activities of the unlawful assembly. On that
finding they held that the accused were guilty of culpable
homicide not amounting to murder under s. 304, read with s.
149, Indian Penal Code; they also held that appellants 1, 2,
3 and 4 were also guilty under s. 148 of the Indian Penal
Code, as they were armed with deadly weapons, and the rest
under s. 147, Indian Penal Code. For the offence under s.
304, read with s. 149, the appellants were sentenced to ten
years’ rigorous imprisonment, and for the offence under s.
148, appellants 1 to 4 were further sentenced to one year’s
rigorous imprisonment and the rest under s. 147, to six
months’ rigorous imprisonment. Having examined the entire
evidence, they agreed with the learned Sessions Judge that
no case had been made out against the other accused beyond
any reasonable doubt. The appeal was, therefore, allowed in
respect of the nine appellants and dismissed in respect of
the others
Learned counsel for the appellants contended that the
Sessions Judge came to a reasonable conclusion on the
evidence and that the. High Court had no substantial and
compelling reasons to take a different view.
In recent years the words "compelling reasons" have become
words of magic incantation in every
124
appeal against acquittal. The words are so elastic that
they are not capable of easy definition; with the result,
their interpretation varied between two extreme views-one
holding that if a trial court acquitted an accused, an
appellate court shall not take a different view unless the
finding is such that no reasonable person will come to that
conclusion, and the other accepting only the conscience of
the appellate court as the yardstick to ascertain whether
there are reasons to compel its interference. In the
circumstances we think it necessary to clarify the point.
The scope of the powers of an appellate court in an appeal
against acquittal has been elucidated by the Privy Council
in Sheo Swarup v. King-Emperor There Lord Russell observed
at p. 404 thus:
"........ the High Court should and will
always give proper weight and consideration to
such matters as (1) the views of the trial
Judge as to the credibility of the witnesses,
(2) the presumption of innocence in favour of
the accused, a presumption certainly not
weakened by the fact that he has been acquit-
ted at his trial, (3) the right of the accused
to the benefit of any doubt, and (4) the
slowness of an appellate court in disturbing a
finding of fact arrived at by a Judge who had
the advantage of seeing the witnesses
Adverting to the facts of the case, the Privy Council
proceeded to state,
"........ They have no reason to think that
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the High Court failed to take all proper
matters into consideration in arriving at
their conclusions of fact."
These two passages indicate the principles to be followed by
an appellate court in disposing of an appeal against
acquittal and also the proper care it should take in re-
evaluating the evidence. The Privy Council explained its
earlier observations in Nur Mohammad v. Emperor (2) thus at
p. 152:
"Their Lordships do not think it necessary to
read it all again, but would like to observe
that there really is only one principle, in
the strict use of the word, laid down there;
that is that the High
(1) (1934) L.R. 61 I.A. 398.
(2) A.I.R. 1945 P.C. 151.
125
Court has full power to review at large all
the evidence upon which the order of acquittal
was founded, and to reach the conclusion that
upon that evidence the order of acquittal
should be reversed."
These two decisions establish that the power of an appellate
court in an appeal against acquittal is not different from
that it has in an appeal against conviction; the difference
lies more in the manner of approach and perspective rather
than in the content of the power. These decisions defining
the scope of the power of an appellate court had been
followed by all the courts in India till the year 1951 when,
it is said, this Court in Surajpal Singh v. The State (1)
laid down a different principle. But a perusal of that
judgment does not bear out the construction which is very
often placed thereon. The passage relied upon is found at
p. 201 and it reads thus:
"It is well-established that in an appeal
under section 417 of the Criminal Procedure
Code, the High Court has full power to review
the evidence upon which the order of acquittal
was founded, but it is equally well settled
that the presumption of innocence of the
accused is further reinforced by his acquittal
by the trial court, and the findings of the
trial court which had the advantage of seeing
the witnesses and hearing their evidence can
be reversed only for very substantial and
compelling reasons."
On the facts of that case this Court held, "we are inclined
to hold that the Sessions Judge had taken a reasonable view
of the facts of the case, and in our opinion there were no
good reasons for reversing that view". We think that these
observations are nothing more than a restatement of the law
laid down by the Privy Council and the application of the
same to the facts of the case before the Court. Though in
one paragraph the learned Judges used the words "substantial
and compelling reasons" and in the next paragraph the words
"good reasons", these observations were not intended to
record any disagreement
(1)[1952] S.C.R. 193.
126
with the observations of Lord Russell in Sheo Swarup’s case
(1) as to matters a High Court would keep in view when
exercising its power under s. 417 of the Criminal Procedure
Code. If it had been so intended, this Court would have at
least referred to Sheo Swarup’s case (1), which it did not.
The same words were again repeated by this Court in Ajmer
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Singh v. The State of Punjab (2). In that case the
appellate court set aside an order of acquittal on the
ground that the accused had failed to explain the
circumstances appearing against him. This court held that
as the presumption of innocence of an accused is reinforced
by the order of acquittal, the appellate court could have
interfered only for substantial and compelling reasons. The
observations made in respect of the earlier decisions
applied to this case also. Mahajan, J., as he then was,
delivering the judgment of the court in Puran v. State of
Punjab (3) again used the words "very substantial and
compelling reasons", but immediately thereafter the learned
Judge referred to the decision of Sheo Swarup’s case(1) and
narrated the circumstances which an appellate court should
bear in mind in interfering with an order of acquittal.
This juxtaposition of the so-called formula and the
circumstances narrated in Sheo Swarup’s case (1) indicate
that the learned Judge used those words only to comprehend
the statement of law made by the Privy Council. Mukherjea,
J., as he then was, in C. M. Narayan v.State of Travancore-
Cochin (4) again referred to thePrivy Council decision
and affirmed the wide powerof an appellate court and also
the proper approach in an appeal against acquittal. The
learned Judge did not introduce any further limitation on
the power of the appellate court. But it was observed that
the High Court had not clearly kept before it the well
settled principles and reversed the decision of the trial
court ’without noticing or giving due weight and
consideration to important matters relied upon by that
court’. In Tulsiram Kanu v. The State (5) this
(1) (1934) L.R. 61 I.A. 398.
(2) [1953] S.C.R. 418.
(3) A I.R. 1933 S.C. 459.
(4) A.I.R. 1953 S.C. 478.
(5) A.I.R. 1954 8.C. I.
127
Court used a different phraseology to describe the approach
of an appellate court against an order of acquittal. There
the Sessions Court expressed that there was clearly
reasonable doubt in respect of the guilt of the accused on
the evidence put before it. Kania, C. J., observed that it
required good and sufficiently cogent reasons to overcome
such reasonable doubt before the appellate court came to a
different conclusion. This observation was made in
connection with a High Court’s judgment which had not taken
into consideration the different detailed reasons given by
the Sessions Judge. In Madan Mohan Singh’s case (1), on
appeal by special leave, this Court said that the High Court
’had not kept the rules and principles of administration of
criminal justice clearly before it and that therefore the
judgment was vitiated by non-advertence to and
misapprehension of various material facts transpiring in
evidence and the consequent failure to give true weight and
consideration to the findings upon which the trial court
based its decision’. In Zwinglee Ariel v. State of M. P.
(2) this Court again cited the passage from the decision of
the Privy Council extracted above and applied it to the
facts of that case. In Rao Shiv Bahadur Singh v. State of
Vindhya Pradesh(1), Bhagwati, J., speaking for the Court,
after referring to an earlier decision of this Court,
accepted the principle laid down by the Privy Council and,
indeed, restated the observations of the Privy Council in
four propositions. It may be noticed that the learned Judge
did not use the words cc substantial and compelling
reasons". In S. A. A. Biyabani v. The State of Madras (4),
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Jagannadhadas, J., after referring to the earlier decisions,
observed at p. 647 thus:
"While no doubt on such an appeal the High
Court was entitled to go into the facts and
arrive at its own estimate of the evidence,
it is also settled law that, where the case
turns on oral evidence of witnesses, the
estimate of such evidence by the trial court
is not to be lightly set aside."
(1) A.I.R. 1954 S.C. 637. (2) A.I.R. 1954 S.C. 15.
(3) A I.R. 1954 S.C. 322. (4) A.I.R. 1954 S.C. 645.
128
The learned Judge did not repeat the so-called formula but
in effect accepted the approach of the Privy Council. The
question was again raised prominently in the Supreme Court
in Aher Raja Khima ,"v. The State of Saurashtra(1). Bose,
J., expressing the majority view, stated at p. 1287 thus:
"It is, in our opinion, well settled that it
is not enough for the High Court to take a
different view of the evidence; there must
also be substantial and compelling reasons for
holding that the trial court was wrong: Ajmer
Singh v. State of Punjab (2); and if the trial
Court takes a reasonable view of the facts of
the case, interference under section 417 is
not justifiable unless there are really strong
reasons for reversing that view."
It may be noticed that the learned Judge equated
"substantial and compelling reasons" with "strong reasons".
Kapur, J., in bhagwan Das V. State of Rajasthan(1) referred
to the earlier decisions and observed that the High Court
should not set aside an acquittal unless there are "
substantial and compelling reasons" for doing so. In Balbir
Singh v. State of Punjab (4), this Court observed much to
the same effect thus at p. 222:
"It is now well settled that though the High
Court has full power to review the evidence
upon which an order of acquittal is founded,
it is equally well settled that the
presumption of innocence of the accused person
is further reinforced by his acquittal by the
trial Court and the views of the trial Judge
as to the credibility of the witnesses must be
given proper weight and consideration; and the
slowness of an appellate Court in disturbing a
finding of fact arrived at by a Judge who had
the advantage of seeing the witnesses must
also be kept in mind and there must be
substantial and compelling reasons for the
appellate Court to come to a conclusion
different from that of the trial Judge."
These observations only restate the principles laid down by
this Court in earlier decisions. There are
(1) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 1285.
(2) [1953] S.C.P. 418, 423.
(3) A.I. R. 1957 S.C. 689.
(4) A.I.R. 1957 S.C. 216.
129
other decisions of this Court where, without discussion,
this Court affirmed the judgments of the High Courts where
they interfered with an order of acquittal without violating
the principles laid down by the Privy Council.
There is no difficulty in applying the principles laid down
by the Privy Council, and accepted by this Court, to the
facts of each case. But appellate courts are finding
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considerable difficulty in understanding the scope of the
words "substantial and compelling reasons" used by this
Court in the decisions cited above. This Court obviously
did not and could not add a condition to s. 417 of the
Criminal Procedure Code. The words were intended to convey
the idea that an appellate court not only shall bear in mind
the principles laid down by the Privy Council but also must
give its clear reasons for coming to the conclusion that the
order of acquittal was wrong.
The foregoing discussion yields the following results: (1)
an appellate court has full power to review the evidence
upon which the order of acquittal is founded; (2) the
principles laid down in Sheo Swarup’s case(1) afford a
correct guide for the appellate court’s approach to a case
in disposing of such an appeal; and (3) the different
phraseology used in the judgments of this Court, such as,
(i) "substantial and compelling reasons", (ii) "good and
sufficiently cogent reasons", and (iii) "strong reasons" are
not intended to curtail the undoubted power of an appellate
court in an appeal against acquittal to review the entire
evidence and to come to its own conclusion; but in doing so
it should not only consider every matter on record having a
bearing on the questions of fact and the reasons given by
the court below in support of its order of acquittal in its
arriving at a conclusion on those facts, but should also
express those reasons in its judgment, which lead it to hold
that the acquittal was not justified.
With this background we shall now look at the judgment of
the Sessions Judge and that of the High
(1) (1934) L.R. 61 I.A. 398.
17
130
Court to ascertain whether the High Court anywhere departed
from the principles laid down by the Privy Council.
The framework of the judgment of the learned Sessions Judge
may be shortly stated thus: The first question was whether
the case of the prosecution that the Rajputs met. under a
banyan tree, conspired to beat the Jats and came back to the
temple armed with weapons was true. This fact was spoken to
by several eve-witnesses, including Goga (P.W. 1), Chandra
(P.W. 2) and Doongar Singh (P.W. 21). This fact was also
mentioned in the First Information Report lodged by Doongar
Singh (P.W. 21). There were 20 eyewitnesses who spoke about
the conspiracy; and, out of them, P.Ws. 5, 8, 9, 11, 12, 15,
16, 17, 18. 19. 24 and 25 received injuries during the riot.
The learned Sessions Judge considered the evidence of P.Ws.
1 and 2 and rejected it on unsubstantial grounds and on the
basis of insignificant discrepancies. Therefter, he noticed
that all the other eye-witnesses, with slight and
inconsequential variations, spoke to the fact of their
returning from the banyan tree with lathies, swords and
guns’ but he did not give a definite finding whether he
accepted that evidence or not, though at the fag end of the
judgment he found that he could not hold that the assembly
of Rajputs had any common object of killing anybody. Then
the learned Sessions Judge proceeded to consider whether any
of the Rajputs were recognized by any of the witnesses. He
divided the accused into three groups, namely, (i) those
accused who were amongst the Rajputs when they had come for
darshan of Baiji, (ii) those accused who were amongst the
Rajputs when they returned from the banyan tree but for whom
the evidence of taking part in the actual rioting is
divided, and (iii) those accused for whom most of the eye-
witnesses have stated that they had committed rioting and
inflicted injuries on the assembly of cultivators. Taking
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the first group, the learned Sessions Judge, for the reasons
given by him earlier, rejected the evidence of Goga and
Chandra, pointed out that 28 accused had not been named
unanimously by all the eye-witnesses,
131
noticed that there was long standing enmity between the
Rajputs and the cultivators, and laid down a criterion that,
for determining the presence of any particular accused,
there should be an allegation against him about doing any
overt act in the unlawful, assembly. By applying the said
yardstick he held that none of the accused falling in the
first group, which included appellants 7, 8 and 9, was
guilty of the offences with which they were charged. Coming
to the second category, with which we are not concerned in
this appeal, the learned Sessions Judge again applied the
test that an overt act should be proved against each of the
accused and held that no case had been made out against
them. Adverting to the third group, after noticing that 12
of the eye-witnesses were those who received injuries, the
learned Sessions Judge applied another test for accepting
their evidence. In effect and substance the test adopted by
him was that an accused identified only by one witness and
not proved to have done any overt act should be acquitted by
giving him the benefit of doubt. Applying this test to the
said witnesses he held that the said accused were not
guilty. After considering the evidence in the aforesaid
manner, he came to the following final conclusion:
"I cannot hold that the assembly of Rajputs
had any common object of killing anybody. All
happened at the spur of the moment. Those
Rajputs who took part in the rioting have not
been truthfully named. Innocent persons have
been implicated and the cases of those persons
who are alleged to have committed any overt
acts are also full of doubts."
On appeal the learned Judges of the High Court, as already
stated, allowed the appeal in respect of the 9 appellants
and dismissed it in regard to the others. The learned
Judges of the High Court observed that it had not the
slightest hesitation in holding that the case put forward by
the prosecution, by and large, represented the substantial
truth and that the incidents at the banyan tree were true.
They pointed out that the reasons given by the Sessions
Judge for not believing the evidence of the main witnesses,
Goga
132
and Chandra, who spoke as to what happened at the banyan
tree, could not be sustained and that the alleged
discrepancies and contradictions in their evidence were not
such as to detract from truthfulness. We have also gone
through the evidence of Goga and Chandra and we entirely
agree with the observations of the learned Judges of the
High Court that their evidence was natural and consistent
and that the alleged discrepancies pointed out by the Ses-
sions Judge were not either contradictions at all or, even
if they were so, they were so trivial as to affect in any
way their veracity. The learned Judges further pointed out
that the evidence of Goga and Chandra was supported by the
evidence of Doongar Singh (P. W. 21), a police constable,
who gave the First Information Report at the earliest point
of time. The recitals in the First Information Report
corroborate his evidence. The learned Judges then indicated
that this version was practically supported by other eve-
witnesses and that they did not see any reason why it should
have been invented, if it was not true. Having regard to
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the said evidence, they found themselves entirely unable to
accept the conclusion of the learned trial Judge that this
was a case where a stray beating was given by some
individuals on the side of the Rajputs to some individuals
on the Bide of the Jats. They found that the Rajputs were
members of an unlawful assembly and that they were all
animated by a common object of beating the cultivators.
Having held that the learned Sessions Judge was clearly
wrong on the question of unlawful assembly, the learned
Judges proceeded to consider the case of each accused.
They adopted the following principle, based upon the
decision of this Court in Abdul Gani v. State of M. P. (1):
"We quite recognise that in a case of rioting
where two inimical factions are involved,
exaggerations are bound to be made, and some
innocent persons are likely to be falsely
implicated; but all the same, it is the duty
of the courts not to throw out the whole case
by following the easy method of
(1) A.I.R. 1954 S.C. 31.
133
relying on discrepancies, and, where the case
for the prosecution is substantially true, to
find out if any of the accused participated,
in the offence, and if their presence is
established beyond all reasonable doubt,
punish them for the offences committed by
them."
They found, on the evidence, that appellant 1, Sanwat Singh,
who was present on the spot was a member of the unlawful
assembly and had actually struck Sheonath with his sword as
a result of which his three fingers were cut; that
appellant 2, Dhan Singh, was one of the persons who took a
leading part in the beating; that appellant 3, Mangej Singh,
was undoubtedly one of the participants in the unlawful
assembly; that appellant 4, Kalu Singh, was armed with a
sword and attacked the Jats and that his version that he had
been first attacked by the Jats was not true; that appellant
5, Narain Singh, was one of the members of the unlawful
assembly and that he had given beatings to P.W. 25; that
appellant 6, Gulab Singh, struck Sheokaran Jat with lathies;
and that appellant 7, Sabal Singh, appellant 8, Baney Singh,
and appellant 9, Inder Singh, who admitted their presence at
the spot but stated that they were attacked by the Jats,
were clearly participators in the beating. As regards the
other accused, the learned Judges, having examined the
entire evidence, agreed with the Sessions Judge in holding
that no case had been made out against those accused beyond
all reasonable doubt. So far as these accused are concerned
there is no evidence to show that any of them had a weapon
or that they had taken any active part in assaulting one or
other of the Jats. In the result, the learned Judges of the
High Court found that the appellants formed an unlawful
assembly to beat the Jats and that they must have known that
murders were likely to be committed in prosecution of that
common object. On that finding, they convicted and senten-
ced the appellants as stated earlier in the judgment.
Now, can it be said that, as learned counsel for the
appellants argues, the Judges of the High Court had ignored
any of the principles laid down by the Privy
134
Council and subsequently accepted by this Court? We
think not.
The foregoing analysis of the findings of the two courts
discloses the following facts: The Sessions judge, on the
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general case of the prosecution that the Rajputs, chagrined
by the attitude of the Jats in occupying their usual place
in the temple, went to the banyan tree, conferred for a
short time and came back to the temple to attack the Jats,
rejected the evidence of the main witnesses for the
prosecution, namely, Goga, Chandra and Doongar Singh, on
grounds which do not stand a moment’s scrutiny and ignored
the voluminous evidence, which corroborated the evidence of
the said three witnesses, without giving valid or acceptable
reasons for the same. The learned Sessions Judge did not
even give a definite finding on this version of the
prosecution case, though impliedly he must be deemed to have
rejected it. In regard to the individual cases he divided
the witnesses into three categories, and, applying
mechanical tests, refused to act upon their evidence. The
High Court rightly pointed out that there was no reason why
the voluminous evidence in support of the general case and
why the evidence of the three witnesses, Goga, Chandra and
Doongar Singh, should be rejected. The learned Judges of
the High Court accepted their evidence, which conclusively
established that the general case was true and that the
appellants actually took active part in attacking the Jats
with swords and lathies. In doing so, the learned Judges
did not depart from any of the principles laid down by the
Privy Council. Indeed, they interfered with the judgment of
the Sessions Judge, as they came to the conclusion that, the
said judgment, in so far as the appellants were concerned,
was clearly wrong and contrary to the overwhelming and
reliable evidence adduced in the case. The learned Judges
of the High Court, in our opinion, approached the case from
a correct perspective and gave definite findings on a
consideration of the entire evidence.
The question now is, whether the appellants have made out
any case for interference with the judgment of the High
Court under Art. 136 of the Constitution.
135
Article 136 of the Constitution confers a wide discretionary
power on this Court to entertain appeals in suitable cases
not otherwise provided for by the Constitution. It is
implicit in the reserve power that it cannot be exhaustively
defined, but decided cases-, do not permit interference
unless "by disregard to the forms of legal process or some
violation of the principles of natural justice or otherwise,
substantial and grave injustice has been done". Though Art.
136 is couched in widest terms, the practice of this Court
is not to interfere on questions of fact except in excep-
tional cases when the finding is such that it shocks the
conscience of the court. In the present case, the High
Court has not contravened any of the principles laid down in
Sheo Swarup’s case (1) and has also given reasons which led
it to hold that the acquittal was not justified. In the
circumstances, no case has been made out for our not
accepting the said findings.
In the result, the appeal fails and is dismissed.
Appeal dismissed.