Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BALBIR SINGH .
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 26/09/1996
BENCH:
A.S. ANAND, K.T. THOMAS
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
O R D E R
This appeal under section 19 of the Terrorist and
Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act, 1987 (hereinater
called the ’TADA’) is directed against the judgment and
order dated 14th February, 1996 by which the appellant has
been convicted for an offence under section 5 of TADA and
sentenced to undergo rigorous imprisonment for eight years
and to pay a fine of Rs.1,000/- and in default to undergo
simple imprisonment for six months.
The prosecution case against the appellant is that on
6th April, 1992, PW.1 H.C. Maru Ram, who was incharge of PCR
Van No.Victor 79, Maruti Gypsy bearing registrtion No.DDV
6920 based in Kailash Colony, alongwith constable Chander
Pal and driver constaable Raj Kumar, received a wireless
message at about 2.05 p.m. to the effect that a person
wearing green coloured pant, green coloured shoes and having
a green coloured bag was present in suspicious
circumstances and that if his bag was searched it On the
rifle there was a sticker with the inscription in Gurmukhi
"Naam Khummari Nanaka Charri Rahe Din Raat". On the magazine
also there was a sticker with the inscription "Raj Karega
Khalsa" in Gurmukhi. The rifle Ex.p1 alongwith two megazines
Ex.P2 and P3 and the live cartridges numbering 161 (24 live
cartridges in one megazine besides 137 cartridges ) were
taken into possession and were sealed into different parcels
and sealed with the seal of SBS. The other articles, found
from the personal search and from the search of the bags
were also sealed into separate parcels and sealed with the
seal of SBS. The sealed parcels ware deposited with Moharror
Malkhana and were later on sent to the Central Forensic
Science Laboratory. The report of the Central Forensic
Science Laboratory PW9/F shows that the sealed parcels
containing the arms and ammunitions with seal of SBS intact
were received in the laboratory and on testing the rifle it
was found to be in a working order. The ballistic expert
opined that the rifle was an arm within the meaning of the
Arms Act. One test cartridge was fired from the rifle and it
was opined that 161 cartridges which had been recovered were
live cartridges. On completion of the investigation, the
appellant was tried for the offence under section 5 of TADA
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and convicted and sentenced as noticed above.
The prosecution with a view to connect the appellant
with the crime examined nine withesses. It produced in
evidence the affidavit of Moharror Malkahana as also the
reports from the CFSL. Various document including the
seizure memos etc. were also produced at the trial. The
appellant in his statement recorded under section 313
Cr.P.C. denied the prosecution allegations against him. He
examined DW.1, Manjit Singh, in his defence who had given a
certificate to the effect that the appellant, was bearing a
good moral character.
We have perused the evidence with the assistance of
learned counsel for the parties and examined the record.
Learned counsel for the appellant submitted that there
was a serious flaw in the prosecution case inasmuch as while
PW.1 deposed that what had been recovered from the
appellant was rifle AK-47, PW.7 in his evidence deposed that
the weapon recovered was AK-56 and that in question No.l put
o the appellant under section 313 cr.P.C. he was told that
he had been found in possession of an AK-56 rifle besides
the live cartridges. On this basis it is aruged that the
identity of the weapon has been rendered W a doubtful. There
is indeed this variance in the evidence of PW.1 and PW.7.
That, however, in our opinion is not of much consequence.
The rifle which was recovered from the appellant bore
No.516275. That number was mentioned in the seizure memo
prepared at the spot. It was that weapon which was sent to
the CFSL and in its report Ext.PW.9/F the CFSL found that
rifle No.516275, Ex.P1, was in working order and conformed
to the description of an arm under the Arms Act. All the
prosecution witnesses relating to recovery of the arms and
ammunitions including PW.1 and PW.7 in the Court identified
rifle bearing No.516275, Ex.P1, as the rifle which had been
recovered from the appellant at the time of his
apprehension. PW.7 also identified rifla Ex.P1 as that
weapon. Nothing therefore turns on as to whether the rifle
was described as AK-47 by PW.1 and AK-56 by PW.7. During his
cross-examination, PW.7 stated that he had never seen an
AK-56 rifle before and that he had never oprated any such
rifle. He did not even know how the megazine is fitted to an
AK-56 rifle or whether AK-56 is the only rifle which is made
in China. It, therefore, appears to us that describing of
the rifle Ex.P.1, bearing No.516275 as AK-47 or AK-56, is
not of much consequence and does not create any doubt about
the identity of the weapon. There is no doubt from the
prosecution evidence that the rifle which recovered from
the possession of the appellant was rifle Ex.P1 bearing
No.516275.
Learned counsel for the appellant then submitted that
though the appellant was arrested from the t park where a
number of witnesses were present, the prosecution had not
examined any independent witnesses and, therefore, the
prosecution case had been rendered doubtful. We cannot
agree. None of the prosecution witnesses who have been
examined bore any ill will or malice against the appellant.
Ofcourse, they all belong to the police force but merely on
that account their evidence cannot be said to be tainted.
Since the departmental witnesses would be interested in the
success of the prosecution case prudence requires that their
evidence be scrutinized with more care. we have critically
and carefully analysed the evidence of all the prosecution
witnesses and find that despite lengthy cross examination
nothing has been brought out which may in any way discredit
their testimony at all. These witnesses had no reason to
falsely implicate the appellant. They have stood the test of
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cross examination. The report of the CFSL lends enough
corroboration to their evidence. It is in the evidence of
PW.1 that when the appellant was over-powered! some persons
were looking from a distance but none of them came at the
spot. Under these circumstances not joining any of those
witnesses cannot affect the credit-worthiness of the
prosecution case.
With a view to convict an accused under section 5 of
TADA, the Constitution Bench in sanjay Dutt vs. State,
(1994) 5 SCC 410 laid down that the prosecution is required
to prove that the accused was in conscious ’possesssion’,
’unauthorisedly’, in a notified area of any of the arms and
ammunition specified in Columns 2 and 3 of Category I or
Category III (a) of Schedule I to the Arms Rules, 1962 or of
bombs, dynamite or other explosive substances and that no
further nexus with any terrorist or disruptive activity is
required to be proved the prosecution, in view of the
statutory presumption and the conviction would be valid on
the strength of the presumption.
In the present case there is ample evidence on the
record to show that the appellant was in conscious
possession of rilfe Ex P1 bearing No.516275 which weapon
answered the description of an arm under the Arms Act as per
the report of the CFSL. The appellant had no licence for
such a weapon and was thus in an unauthorised possession of
the same. There is no dispute that the recovery was made
from the area which was a declared notified area. All the
ingredients essential for proving of an offence under
section 5 of TADA stand established in the case and his
conviction is well merited.
Before parting with the case would be relevant to point
out that even if it could be possible to say, for the sake
of arguments, though there is no basis for it, that the
description of the weapon put to the appellant in his
statement under section 313 Cr.P.C. as AK-56 had prejudiced
him, it would still not affect the prosecution case because
there is nothing on the record to show that Rifle Ex.P1 was
not an AK-56 rifle. Besided in answer to question No.4 put
to the appellant in his statement under section 313 Cr.P.C.
his attention was specifically invited to the recovery of
rifle Ex.P1 besides the cartridges. Therefore, there could
be no possibility of any prejudice having/caused to the
appellant by the mentioning of AK-56 in question No.1.
Besides, 161 live cartridges were also recovered from his
possession. The law laid down by this Court in Paras Ram vs.
State of Haryana, (1992) 4 SCC 662, that for an offence
under Section 5, the recovery must be of "arms and
ammunitions" and not of either arm or "ammunition" has been
held to be not good law by the Constitution Bench in Sanjay
Dutt’s case (supra) wherein it was opined that while
interpreting the expression arms and "ammunitions" in
section 5 of TADA, the words have to be read disjuntively
and not conjunctively. The appellant was found to be in
possession of 161 live cartridge consciously and
unauthorisedly in a notified area. This recovery by itself
would attract the provisions of Section 5 of TADA.
The next question, however, is with regard to the
quantum of sentence.
The appellant has been awarded sentence of 8 years
rigrous imprisonment besides a fine Or Rs. 1,000/. He was
about 20 years of age. In the facts arc circumstances of the
case, in our opinion, it would meet the ends of Justice if
the substantive sentence of the appellant is reduced from 8
years rigorous imprisonment to six years rigorous
imprisonment while maintaining the sentence of fine and the
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punishment in default thereof. We make an order accordingly.
With the above modifiction in sentence the appeal is partly
allowed.