Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
HARENDRA NARAIN SINGH ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF BIHAR
DATE OF JUDGMENT17/07/1991
BENCH:
SINGH, K.N. (J)
BENCH:
SINGH, K.N. (J)
SAWANT, P.B.
CITATION:
1991 AIR 1842 1991 SCR (3) 54
1991 SCC (3) 609 JT 1991 (3) 167
1991 SCALE (2)76
ACT:
Indian Evidence Act, 1872. Section3. Criminal
Trial--Evidence --Circumstantial evidence--Nature and proof
of--Conditions precedent for conviction--Two views possible
on circumstantial evidence-One pointing to the guilt of the
accused and the other to his innocence-Court should adopt
latter--Circumstantial evidence--Onus of proof-Prosecution
must adduce its own evidence--It cannot rely on the absence
of defence--Infirmity or lacuna in the prosecution cannot be
cured by false explanation of accused.
Indian Penal Code, 1860: Sections 302 and 34
Murder--Conviction based on circumstantial evidence--Validi-
ty of.
HEADNOTE:
Appellants 1 and 2, along with other co-accused, were
prosecuted for the offence of murder. The entire evidence
was circumstantial: (a) The murder was committed by Appel-
lant-2 in the dispensary of the Appellant-1, a doctor, with
his connivance; (b) the dead body was taken out of the
dispensary of the appellant-1 and the same was kept on an
ekka and carried to a village Dibbi where it was placed in
the courtyard of one of the co-accused; and (c) Recovery of
the dead body from the courtyard of a co-accused.
The Trial Court acquitted the accused from whose house
the dead body was recovered but convicted the remaining four
accused for the offences under section 302/34 of the Indian
Penal Code. On appeal by the accused persons the High Court
acquitted the other two coaccused but upheld the conviction
of the two appellants. Against their conviction, the appel-
lants filed appeals in this Court, By an order dated 3.5.
1991, this Court allowed their appeals and set aside their
conviction.
Giving reasons in support of its judgment, this Court,
HELD: 1. It is a cardinal principle of criminal juris-
prudence that circumstantial evidence must be fully estab-
lished from which there should be inevitable conclusion of
the guilt of the accused beyond any reasonable doubt and the
facts so established should be consistent only
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with the hypothesis of the guilt of the accused, ruling out
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any hypothesis of innocence of the accused. [58B]
2. There is yet another basic rule of criminal jurispru-
dence that if two views are possible on the evidence adduced
in a case of circumstantial evidence, one pointing to the
guilt of the accused and the other to his innocence, the
Court should adopt the latter view favourable to the ac-
cused. [59C]
3. The prosecution has to succeed on the basis of its
own evidence and it can not rely on the absence of defence
to sustain the guilt as there is no justification for rais-
ing such assumption against the appellants. [63B]
Hanumant v. The State of Madhya Pradesh, [1952] 3 S.C.R.
1091; Shivaji Saheb Rao Bobde & Anr. v. State of Maharash-
tra, [1973] 2 S.C.C. 793: [1974] 1 S.C.R. 489 and Sharad B.
Chand v. Maharashtra, [1985] 1 S.C.R. 88, referred to.
4. In the instant case, there are glaring circumstances
which are fatal to the prosecution case. The prosecution has
produced evidence only to the effect that a dead body was
taken out of the dispensary of Appellant-1 by Appellant-2
and other accused persons and the same was carried on the
ekka to village Dibbi. The prosecution witnesses have merely
deposed that they had seen a dead body being placed on the
ekka and taken to village Dibbi. None of the prosecution
witness has however, deposed that he had seen the face of
the dead body or identified the same. In the absence of such
evidence it would not be reasonable to assume that the dead
body which was taken out from the dispensary and placed on
the ekka was that of the deceased. In the absence of identi-
fication of dead body by the witnesses it is not legitimate
to hold that the dead body which was taken out from the
dispensary of Appellant-1 was that of deceased. [62E-F, G]
4.1 There is another vital defect in the prosecution
case. The prosecution failed to produce any evidence that
the deceased was taken to the dispensary for treatment by
Appellant-2 and other accused persons while she was alive
and that she was admitted to the dispensary of Appellant-1
for treatment, at a time when she was alive. In the absence
of any such evidence there are various possibilities and
probabilities, one of them being that the deceased may have
been brought to the dispensary for medical assistance after
she was found to be strangulated by some one. Further there
is no evidence of the fact
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that when the deceased was inside the dispensary no other
person had access to her except the appellants. In the
absence of any such evidence it would not be legitimate to
assume that the deceased was strangulated in the dispensary
by Appellant-2 with the connivance of Appellant-1 Therefore,
the prosecution failed to prove the necessary facts and the
circumstances established by it are not sufficient to con-
clusively point to the appellants as the perpetrator of the
crime or to rule out the hypothesis of their innocence.
Accordingly, the High Court and the Trial Court both commit-
ted error in convicting the appellants. The High Court was
also not justified in drawing adverse inference for complet-
ing the chain of circumstances to uphold the appellant’s
conviction merely on the appellant’s false explnaton in,
defence. [62G-H, 63A-C-D]
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal Nos.
578/88 & 728/89.
From the Judgment and Order dated 15.7. 1986 of Patna
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High Court in Crl. A. Nos. 97 & 87 of 1983.
A. Sharan for the Appellants.
D. Goburdhan for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SINGH, J These appeals were heard on 3.5. 1991 and after
hearing learned counsel for the parties we had pronounced
the operative portion of the judgment allowing the appeals
and setting aside the judgment and order of the High Court
convicting the appellants for offences under Section 302/34
I.P.C. We had observed that the reasons for the judgment
would be given later and now we are giving reasons for the
same.
These two appeals are directed against the judgment and
order of the High Court of Patna dated 15.7. 1986 upholding
the conviction of Dr. Harendra Narain Singh and Ram Nath
Singh, appellants for the offences under Section 302/34 of
the I.P.C.
Briefly, the facts as disclosed by the prosecution are
that Smt. Jagia Devi; a widow having two sons was carrying
four months pregnancy. She was taken to the dispensary of
Dr. Harendra Narain Singh, the appellant who was a Homeo-
pathic doctor on the pretext of treatment of pain in her
stomach though the real purpose for taking’
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her to the dispensary was for aborting foetus which she was
carrying. She was murdered in the dispensary and her dead
body was taken to Village Dibbi in an Ekka and placed in the
courtyard of the house of Smt. Tileshwara Kuar. Teg Bahadur
Singh PW 11 came to know from a young boy that a dead body
was kept in the courtyard of Smt. fileshwara Kuar. He went
to the house of Smt. Tileshwara Kuar and on interrogation
she told him that some persons after committing murder of
Jagia Devi had kept her dead body inside her house. The door
of the house was locked. Smt. Tileshwara handed over the key
to Teg Bahadur Singh who unlocked the door and entered the
house and found the dead body of Jagia lying on the ground
in the courtyard. He rushed to the Police Station and re-
ported the matter to the police which was reduced in writ-
ing. The police registered a case and proceeded to the spot.
The Investigating Officer recovered the dead body from the
house of Tileshwara Kuar and made inquest and sent the dead
body for post-mortem. On completion of investigation the
police submitted’ chargesheet against seven accused persons,
namely, Tileshwara Kuar, Ram Nath Singh, Bishwanath Roy s/o
Dip Roy, Ishwar Shah, Dr. Harendra Narain Singh, Smt. Jota
Kuar w/o Dip Roy and Bishwanath Singh alias Bissu. During
the pendency of the case before the Trial Court Bishwanath
Roy and Jota Kuar died, therefore, the trial proceeded only
against the remaining five accused persons.
Before the Trial Court, the prosecution produced 14
witnesses in support of its case but there was no direct
evidence or eye witness to support the charge of murder.
Entire case of the prosecution is founded on circumstantial
evidence. The Trial Court acquitted Smt. Tileshwara Kuar who
had been charged for offences under Section 302/34 and 201
of the IPC but it convicted the remaining accused Ram Nath
Singh, Ishwar Shah, Harendra Narain Singh & Bishwanath Singh
alias Bissu for the offences under Section 302 of the IPC
read with Section 34 of the IPC and also under Section 3
15/34, IPC. On appeal by the accused the High Court acquit-
ted Ishwar Shah, Bishwanath Singh alias Bissu but it upheld
the conviction of Dr. Harendra Narain Singh and Ram Nath
Singh for offences under Section 302/34 of the IPC. Ag-
grieved Dr. Harendra Narain Singh and Ram Nath Singh have
preferred these two appeals.
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The entire case of the prosecution rests on the circum-
stantial evidence as no prosecution witness has given any
direct testimony against the appellants for the commission
of the offence for which they have been convicted. The Trial
Court as well as *he High Court both have relied on circum-
stantial evidence in convicting the appellants for
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the offences under Section 302/34 of the IPC. Since the
entire case rests on circumstantial evidence it is necessary
to refer to the principles which should guide the Court in
considering the conviction of an accused resting on circum-
stantial evidence. It is a cardinal principle of criminal
jurisprudence that circumstantial evidence must be fully
established from which there should be inevitable conclusion
of the guilt of the accused beyond any reasonable doubt and
the facts so established should be consistent only with the
hypothesis of the guilt of the accused, ruling out any
hypothesis of innocence of the accused. In Hanurnant v. The
State of Madhya Pradesh, [1952] 3 SCR 1091 this Court laid
down fundamental and basic principles for appreciating the
circumstantial evidence. Mahajan, J, speaking for the Court
observed:
"It is well to remember that in cases where
the evidence is of a circumstantial nature,
the circumstances from which the conclusion of
guilt is to be drawn should in the first
instance be fully established and all the
facts so established should be consistent only
with the hypothesis of the guilt of the ac-
cused. Again the circumstances should be of a
conclusive nature and tendency and they should
be such as to exclude every hypothesis but the
one proposed to be proved. In other words,
there must be a chain of evidence so far
complete as not to leave any reasonable ground
for a conclusion consistent with the innocence
of the accused and it must be such as to show
that within all human probability the act must
have been done by the accused."
These principles were reiterated by this Court in Shi-
vaji Saheb Rao Bobde & Anr. v. State of Maharashtra, [1973]
2 SCC 793 wherein it was emphasised that where the prosecu-
tion rests merely on circumstantial evidence, the facts
established should be consistent only with the hypothesis of
the guilt of the accused, that is to say, they should not be
explainable on any other hypothesis except that the accused
is guilty. The Court further observed that the circumstances
should be of a conclusive nature and tendency and they
should exclude every possible hypothesis except the one to
be proved and the chain of evidence should be so complete as
to rule out any reasonable ground for the conclusion con-
sistent with the innocence of the accused and the circum-
stances must show that in all human probability the act must
have been done by the accused. These principles have been
consistently laid down by this Court in several decisions,
it is not necessary to refer to all these decisions. Howev-
er, we would like to refer to the decision in Sharad B.
Chand v. Maharashtra, [1985] 1 SCR page 88 as
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this case has been relied upon by the High Court in uphold-
ing the conviction of the appellants. In Sharad B. Chand’s
case this Court while considering the absence of explanation
or a false explanation of the accused for the circumstances
and the facts proved against him, struck a note of caution
that before a false explanation is used as additional link
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against the accused the Court should satisfy itself that (1)
Various links in the chain of evidence led by the prosecu-
tion have been satisfactorily proved. (2) The circumstances
point to the guilt of accused with reasonable definiteness;
and (3) The circumstances are in proximity to the time and
situation where all these conditions are fulfilled only then
a Court can use a false explanation or a false defence of an
accused, as an additional link to lend an assurance to the
Court and not otherwise. There is yet another basic rule of
criminal jurisprudence that if two views are possible on the
evidence adduced in a case of circumstantial evidence, one
pointing to the guilt of the accused and the other to his
innocence, the Court should adopt the latter view favourable
to the accused. We have reminded ourselves of these princi-
ples with a view to ascertain as to whether the High Court
has correctly applied these principles in convicting and
sentencing the appellants.
The evidence produced by the prosecution relates to
establish the circmustances that (1) Smt. Jagia Devi, a
widow (brother’s daughter of Smt. Tileshwara Kuar, the
accused) died on 22.9.1973. (2) Death of Jagia Devi was
caused due to throttling leading to asphyxia as deposed by
Dr. Anand Mohan PW 6. The Doctor who carried on the postmor-
tem of the dead body was of the opinion that Jagia Devi
killed by strangulation in the neck. (3) 1n the night be-
tween 22.9. 1973 and 23.9.1973, a dead body was taken out of
the dispensary of Dr. Harendra Narain Singh by the accused
Ram Nath Singh and Bish wanath Singh alias Bissu and placed
on an ekka in the presence of Ishwar Shah and Dr. Harendra
Narain Singh. Smt. Jota Kuar (mother of Ram Nath Singh, the
appellant) was also present there. (4) The dead body was
placed on the ekka of Amanat Khan PW 10 and the same was
carried to village Dibbi. Ram Nath Singh, Bishwanath Singh
and Jota Kuar also accompanied the dead body to village
Dibbi. (5) Recovery of the dead body of Jagia Devi from the
courtyard of Smt. Tileshwara Kuar, an accused.
On the basis of these circumstances, the High Court
upheld the conviction of Ram Nath Singh and Dr. Harendra
Narain Singh, the appellants, as in its opinion Ram Nath
Singh had motive to murder Jagia Devi as she being a widow
was carrying pregnancy of four
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months. The murder was committed in the dispensary of Dr.
Harendra Narain Singh where she had been taken for medical
aid for pain in stomach. The Trial Court had acquitted Smt.
Teleshwara Kuar, from whose house dead body was recovered.
In appeal the High Court acquitted Ishwar Shah and Bishwa-
nath Singh alias Bissu also. The prosecution evidence and
the circumstances on the basis of which Ram Nath Singh and
Dr. Harendra Narain Singh have been convicted are the same
as applicable to the case of Ishwar Shah and Bishwanath
Singh alias Bissu, but the High Court acquitted them and at
the same time it upheld the conviction of Ram Nath Singh and
Dr. Harendra Narain Singh on the same set of the evidence
and circumstances without’ there being any distinction. The
main circumstances which weighed with the High Court in
upholding the conviction of Ram Nath Singh and Dr. Harendra
Narain Singh was that the dead body of Jagia Devi was taken
out of the dispensary of Dr. Harendra Narain Singh and
placed on the ekka of Amanat Khan PW 10 by Ram Nath Singh.
In view of this proved circumstance the High Court concluded
that in all likelihood Jagia Devi was murdered in the dis-
pensary of Dr. Harendra Narain Singh with his connivance and
thereafter the dead’ body was taken on ekka to village Dibbi
and placed in the courtyard of Smt. Teleshwara Kuar. The
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presumption that Ram Nath Singh committed murder of Jagia
Devi by strangulation in the dispensary of Dr. Harendra
Narain Singh with his connivance is based on conjecture
without there being any conclusive circumstance justifying
such presumption.
The High Court has placed strong reliance on the evi-
dence of PW 10 Amanat Khan in holding the appellants Dr.
Harendra Narain Singh and Ram Nath Singh guilty of murder.
PW 10 Amanat Khan was an ekkawala who plied passengers on
hire, he was resident of village Bagaura, where the dispen-
sary of Dr. Harendra Narain Singh was situate. Amanat Khan
testified that at about 2 a.m. in the night the appellants
Ram Nath Singh, Dr. Harendra Narain Singh and Bishwanath
Singh alias Bissu awakened him and requested him to ’carry a
patient to village Dibbi. At first he refused to ply his
ekka at that odd hour of the night but after some time they
again returned and put pressure on him to take his ekka to
the dispensary of Dr. Harendra Narain Singh for transporting
the patient to Village Dibbi. On their pursuasion he took
his ekka to the dispensary of Dr. Harendra Narain Singh
where he found Ishwar Shah, Jagannath and Smt. Jota Kuar
(mother of appellant Ram Nath) present at the dispensary.
According to him Ram Nath and Bishwanath, deceased brought a
dead body from the dispensary of the appellant Harendra
Narain Singh and placed the
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same on the ekka. Ram Nath Singh, Bishwanath Singh alias
Bissu and Smt. Jota Kuar also sat in the ekka. On their
request he carried them to village Dibbi Where Ram Nath and
Bishwanath alias Bissu unloaded the dead body from the ekka
at the house of Smt. Teleshwara Kuar. Amanat Khan’s testimo-
ny is supported by PW 3, Dukhan Majhi, PW 4 Bisheshvar
Chowkidar and PW 5 Shiv Dutt. Their testimony is merely to
the fact that the appellants Ram Nath Singh and Bishwanath
Singh were sitting on the ekka which was carrying a dead
body from the dispensary of Dr. Harendra Narain Singh.
Placing reliance on the testimony of these witnesses the
High Court and the Trial Court concluded that Smt. Jagia
Devi, the deceased was murdered in the dispensary of Dr.
Harendra Narain Singh and the dead body was carried by them
on the ekka to village Dibbi and placed in the courtyard of
Smt. Tileshwara Kuar. The High Court and the Trial Court
both failed to notice that the prosecution produced no
evidence to show that Smt. Jagia, the deceased was brought
to the dispensary of Dr. Harendra Narain Singh while she was
alive. There is further no evidence as to who brought her to
the dispensary in what condition. The only evidence which
the prosecution has produced in this respect is that a dead
body was taken out from the dispensary of Dr. Harendra
Narain Singh and placed on the ekka by Ram Nath Singh and
others and taken to village Dibbi.
The High Court was conscious of the weakness of the
prosecution case, even then it upheld the conviction of the
appellant perhaps on moral grounds. In para 3 of its judg-
ment the High Court observed:
"although 14 witnesses have been examined on
behalf of the prosecution there is no direct
evidence or eye witness account of murder. The
witnesses however are not all relevant even
for proving the circumstances and other colat-
oral matters".
After making the aforesaid observations ordinarily the
High Court should have rejected the prosecution case which
was based on circumstantial evidence but strangely enough
the High Court inspite of the aforesaid observations, upheld
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the conviction of the appellants.
While dealing with the case of Dr. Harendra Narain Singh
the High Court observed that he was a man of shaky charac-
ter. This observation was made on the basis that even though
he was a homeopathic doctor but allopathic medicines were
recovered from his dispensary. In our opinion, mere recovery
of allopathic medicines from the dis-
62
pensary of Dr. Harendra Narain Singh does not necessarily
show that he was a man of shaky character. It is a matter of
common knowledge that even a homeopathic doctor sometimes
refer the patients to allopathic treatment. The fact of
recovery of allopathic medicines has no connection or rela-
tion to the commission of the offence for which Dr. Harendra
Narain Singh has been convicted. The High Court further
observed that when the dead body of the deceased was taken
out from the dispensary by Ram Nath Singh and other accused
persons Dr. Harendra Narain Singh was present at the spot,
therefore he was so closely connected with the affairs
taking place at his house that none could without his as-
sistance do anything, Apart from this there was no other
evidence or circumstance against Dr. Harendra Narain Singh
It is significant to note that according to the prosecution
when the dead body of the deceased was taken out of dispen-
sary and placed on ekka Ishwar Shah and Bishwanath Singh
alias Bissu accused were also present at the dispensary
along with Dr. Harendra Narain Singh yet’they have been
acquitted by the High Court. The High Court failed to give
any cogent reason for upholding the conviction of Dr. Haren-
dra Narain Singh.
We have carefully gone through the evidence on record
and considered the various circumstances and the facts of
the case. In our opinion, there are two glaring circum-
stances which are fatal to the prosecution case. The prose-
cution has produced evidence only to the effect that a dead
body was taken out of the dispensary of Dr. Harendra Narain
Singh by Ram Nath Singh and other accused persons and the
same was carried on the ekka to village Dibbi. The prosecu-
tion witnesses have merely deposed that they had seen a dead
body being placed on the ekka and taken to village Dibbi.
None of the prosecution witness has however, deposed that he
had seen the face of the dead body or identified the same.
In the absence of such evidence it would not be reasonable
to assume that the dead body which was taken out from the
dispensary and placed on the ekka was that of the deceased
Jagia Devi. In the absence of identification of dead body by
the witnes ses it is not legitimate to hold that the dead
body which was taken out from the dispensary of Dr. Harendra
Narain Singh was that of Jagia Devi. There is another vital
defect in the prosecution case: The prosecution failed to
produce any evidence that the deceased Jagia Devi was taken
to the hospital for treatment by Ram Nath Singh and other
accused persons while she was alive and that she was admit-
ted to the dispensary of Dr. Harendra Narain Singh for
treatment, at a time when she was alive. In the absence of
any Such evidence there are various possibilities and proba-
bilities, one of them being that the
63
deceased may have been brought to the dispensary for medical
assistance after she was found to be strangulated by some
one. There is further no evidence of the fact that when the
deceased was inside the dispensary no other person had
access to her except the appellants. In the absence of any
such evidence it would not be legitimate to assume that the
deceased was strangulated in the dispensary by Ram Nath
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Singh with the connivance of Dr. Harendra Narain Singh.
Merely because the appellants failed to raise any such plea
in their defence does not lend any support to the prosecu-
tion case. The prosecution has to succeed on the basis of
its own evidence and it can not rely on the absence of
defence to sustain the guilt as there is no justification
for raising such assumption against the appellants. The
circumstances established by the prosecution are not suffi-
cient to conclusively point to the appellants as the perpe-
trator of the crime or to rule out the hypothesis of their
innocence. Since the prosecution failed to prove the neces-
sary facts showing that the deceased while alive was last
seen in the company of the appellants or that the dead body
which was carried on the ekka was that of the deceased Jagia
Devi, the High Court was not justified in drawing adverse
inference for completing the chain of circumstances to
uphold the appellant’s conviction merely on the appellant’s
false explanation in defence.
In view of the above discussion, we are of the opinion
that the High Court and the Trial Court both committed error
in convicting the appellants. We accordingly allow the
appeals and set aside the judgment and order of the High
Court convicting the appellants.
T.N.A. Appeals
allowed.
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