Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 471 of 1998
Appeal (crl.) 472 of 1998
Appeal (crl.) 380 of 1998
Appeal (crl.) 1067 of 1998
PETITIONER:
MAHABIR SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF HARYANA
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 26/07/2001
BENCH:
K.T. Thomas & R.P. Sethi
JUDGMENT:
THOMAS, J.
An accused in a murder case barged into a courtroom on
his own during the morning hours, exhibiting a knife and
wanting the Magistrate to record his confession. The
Magistrate obliged him to do so and after administering
oath to him the Magistrate recorded the confession and got
it signed by the confessor. A Sessions Judge and Division
Bench of the High Court of Punjab and Haryana accepted the
said confession as legally admissible, found it to be
genuine and voluntary and acted upon it, among other
things, and convicted the confessor of a murder-charge and
sentenced him to life imprisonment. He is Ranbir Singh
the first accused - who filed this appeal by special leave.
There were three other accused arraigned along with
Ranbir Singh for the offence of murder of the same deceased
with the aid of Section 34 of IPC. The Sessions Court
found them not guilty and acquitted. But the Division Bench
of the High Court, on appeal filed by the State, reversed
the acquittal and convicted them also under Section 302
read with Section 34 IPC and sentenced them to imprisonment
for life. They have filed this appeal as of right under
Section 379 of the Code of Criminal Procedure (for short
the Code) and Section 2 of the Supreme Court (Enlargement
of Criminal Appellate Jurisdiction) Act, 1970. All the
appellants were heard together.
The case relates to the murder of a twenty-year old
youth by name Anand, on the evening of 11.10.1991 by
stabbing him all over his body, practically sparing no limb
left unwounded. Prosecution has traced out the backdrop
that the said deceased was responsible for the untimely
death of an adolescent girl, the sister of Ranbir Singh, as
the aftermath of that lass being ravished. Though Ranbir
Singh described to others that his sister died due to
cardiac arrest he was harbouring in his mind an unstable
vengeance towards the deceased.
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On the date of occurrence the deceased visited his
sisters house at Gangeswar Village. According to the
prosecution, while he and his nephew (Sandeep) were on an
evening stroll he was buttonholed by the appellant who
suggested to the deceased to have a walk with him but the
deceased did not respond to the said suggestion. Then the
appellant Ranbir Singh caught him and stabbed with a knife
on his abdomen. He wriggled out of the grip of the
assailant and made a bid to escape from the scene, but he
was intercepted by all the four appellants and they all
inflicted blows on him. He fell down after sustaining a
large number of injuries and died on the spot itself.
Dr. S.S. Punia (PW-9) conducted the autopsy of the
dead body of the deceased. He noticed as many as 31 stab
injuries on different parts of the trunk of the body, 4 on
the face, 6 on the neck, 5 on the chest, 5 on the abdomen
and 5 on the back and the remaining on other portions of
the body. The description of the ante-mortem injuries as
narrated by the doctor in the post-mortem report reflects
the intensity of the wrath of the assailants towards the
victim.
Prosecution examined PW-1 (Sandeep) as the solitary
eye witness to the occurrence. His father Nafe Singh (PW-
10) was examined to speak to the version reported to him by
PW-1 soon after the occurrence. It was PW-10 who lodged the
FIR on the basis of the information supplied by Sandeep.
The Judicial Magistrate who recorded the confession of
Ranbir Singh was examined as PW-2. The other prosecution
witnesses were mostly officials. The appellants when
examined under Section 313 of the Code, denied their
involvement in the occurrence altogether. The Sessions
Judge placed reliance on the testimony of PW-1 and also on
the confession of the appellant Ranbir Singh besides the
evidence of PW-10 as a piece of corroboration. The trial
judge reached the conclusion that the deceased was
incessantly stabbed by Ranbir Singh alone. He was not
satisfied with the evidence against the remaining
appellants. He pointed out that PW-1 when interrogated by
the police on 14.10.1991 did not mention anything to the
Investigating Officer regarding the role played by the
other appellants. Hence the Sessions Judge convicted
Ranbir Singh alone under Section 302 IPC and acquitted the
others.
The State filed appeal before the High Court
challenging the acquittal of the three appellants while
Ranbir Singh filed a separate appeal challenging the
conviction and sentence passed on him. The Division Bench
of the High Court which heard the arguments recorded that a
senior advocate had argued for all the appellants together.
We mention this because of a grievance voiced before us by
one of the appellants that he did not engage any advocate
in the High Court as he did not get any notice of the
appeal filed by the State against him. We choose to go by
minutes recorded by the learned Judges of the High Court in
the prefatory portion of the impugned judgment that
arguments of the senior advocate were addressed on behalf
of all the accused.
Learned Judges of the High Court while confirming the
conviction and sentence passed on the appellant Ranbir
Singh made a scathing attack on the Sessions Judge for the
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reasoning advanced in support of the order of acquittal of
the other three accused. One of the reasoning which the
Division Bench pointed out was that PW-1 was confronted
only with the statement recorded under Section 161 of the
Code on 14.10.1991, whereas that witness was interrogated
by the Investigating Officer on 12.10.1991; The earlier
interrogation record should have been traced out by the
trial judge from the Case Diary of the police, according to
the learned Judges of the Division Bench. The High Court
expressed the view that the Sessions Judge had a duty to
peruse the Case Diary prepared as per Section 172 of the
Code for satisfying himself whether the witness had stated
any particular fact during the interrogation. The High
Court took pains to scrutinise the Case Diary and learned
Judges copiously used the entries therein for driving the
point home. V.K. Bali, J., who authored the judgment of the
Division Bench has made the following remarks:
The statement of Sandeep dated October 12,
1991 has been separately annexed with the
entry and the same is in tune with the
statement made by him in the court. The
statements of other persons under Section
161 Cr.P.C. were also recorded on the same.
From the oral statement of Sandeep and that
of the investigation officer, supported by
the police case diaries, we are certain that
statement of Sandeep was actually recorded
in the morning of October 12, 1991, and the
findings recorded by the learned trial Judge
to the contrary are absolutely erroneous.
Learned Judges of the High Court further expressed
that the criminal court has unfettered power to examine
the entries in the diaries and hence the trial judge was
supposed to go through the police diaries with a view to
find out whether any statement was made by PW-1 Sandeep on
12.10.1991 to the Investigation Officer. In that context
the High Court made the following observations:
We are quite convinced that not only the
police had let off the co-accused of Ranbir
but even the magistracy (sic) has failed in
imparting justice and falling prey to the
evil propensities of police indulged by the
higher officers, as is well made out from
the statement of investigation officer, who
clearly stated that the higher officers
thought that co-accused of Ranbir were
innocent.
It would have been desirable that the High Court did
not make such strong remarks castigating the police and the
subordinate judiciary, when the situation did not warrant
such castigation. Judicial restraint should have dissuaded
the High Court from making such unnecessary castigation.
That apart the legal proposition propounded by the High
Court regarding the use of Section 172 of the Code is
erroneous. The whole exercise made by the High Court on
that aspect was in the wake of what PW-1 said that he was
questioned by the Investigating Officer on 12.10.1991.
That might be so but the defence counsel used the statement
as recorded on 14.10.1991 under Section 161 of the Code for
the purpose of contradicting PW-1. The said portion of the
evidence of PW-1 is extracted below:
I had also stated before the police that
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all the accused had further started beating
Anand (Confronted with statement Ex.DA
wherein except for the knife blow wielded by
Ranbir there is no other role attributed to
the remaining accused).
The omission in Ext.DA (the statement ascribed under
Section 161 of the Code by PW-1 dated 14.10.1991) regarding
the role attributed to A-2 to A-4 relates to a very
material aspect and hence it amounted to contradiction.
When any part of such statement is used for contradicting
the witness during cross-examination the Public Prosecutor
had the right to use any other part of the statement,
during re-examination, for the purpose of explaining it.
The said right of the Public Prosecutor is explicitly
delineated in the last part of the proviso to Section
162(1) of the Code. The first limb of the proviso says
that any part of the statement (recorded by the
Investigating Officer) may be used to contradict such
witness in the manner provided by Section 145 of the Indian
Evidence Act. The next limb of the proviso reads thus:
And when any part of such statement is so
used, any part thereof may also be used in
the re-examination of any witness but for
the purpose only of explaining any matter
referred to in cross-examination.
Explanation added to the section is also extracted below:
Explanation.- An omission to state a fact
or circumstance in the statement referred to
in sub-section (1) may amount to
contradiction if the same appears to be
significant and otherwise relevant having
regard to the context in which such omission
occurs and whether any omission amounts to a
contradiction in the particular context
shall be a question of fact.
The said explanation was inserted into the statute
book when Parliament approved the legal position propounded
by a Constitution Bench of this Court regarding the legal
implication of an omission to state any fact in the
statement under Section 161 vide Tahsildar Singh and anr.
vs. State of U.P. (AIR 1959 SC 1012).
If a Public Prosecutor failed to get the contradiction
explained as permitted by the last limb of the proviso to
Section 162(1) of the Code, is it permissible for the court
to invoke the powers under Section 172 of the Code for
explaining such contradiction? For that purpose we may
examine the scope of Section 172 of the Code. That section
deals with the diary of proceedings in investigation. Sub-
section (1) enjoins on the Investigating Officer to enter
in a diary the time at which he began and the place or
places visited by him during the course of investigation.
Such entries should be made on a day-to-day basis. Sub-
sections (2) and (3) of Section 172 read thus:
(2) any Criminal Court may send for the
police diaries of a case under inquiry or
trial in such Court, and may use such
diaries, not as evidence in the case, but to
aid it in such inquiry or trial.
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(3) Neither the accused nor his agents shall
be entitled to call for such diaries, nor
shall he or they be entitled to see them
merely because they are referred to by the
Court; but, if they are used by the police
officer who made them to refresh his
memory, or if the Court uses them for the
purpose of contradicting such police
officer, the provisions of Section 161 or
Section 145, as the case may be, of the
Indian Evidence Act, 1872 (1 of 1872), shall
apply.
A reading of the said sub-sections makes the position
clear that the discretion given to the court to use such
diaries is only for aiding the court to decide on a point.
It is made abundantly clear in sub-section (2) itself that
the court is forbidden from using the entries of such
diaries as evidence. What cannot be used as evidence
against the accused cannot be used in any other manner
against him. If the court uses the entries in a Case Diary
for contradicting a police officer it should be done only
in the manner provided in Section 145 of the Evidence Act
i.e. by giving the author of the statement an opportunity
to explain the contradiction, after his attention is called
to that part of the statement which is intended to be so
used for contradiction. In other words, the power
conferred on the court for perusal of the diary under
Section 172 of the Code is not intended for explaining a
contradiction which the defence has winched to the fore
through the channel permitted by law. The interdict
contained in Section 162 of the Code, debars the court from
using the power under Section 172 of the Code for the
purpose of explaining the contradiction.
The assertion of PW-1 that A-2 to A-4 had given blows
to the deceased thus stands contradicted by his own
previous statement. Such a contradiction is on a crucial
aspect pertaining to the complicity of A-2 to A-4. The
trial court was well justified in holding that the evidence
of PW-1 is not sufficient to convict those three accused
for the offence under Section 302 with the aid of Section
34 IPC.
That apart, there should have been strong and good
reasons for the High Court for converting an order of
acquittal into one of conviction. The legal position on
that score has been stated by this Court time and again.
Suffice it to reproduce what is stated by the court in the
decision of this Court in Dhanna vs. State of M.P.{1996
(10) SCC 79}.
Though the Code does not make any
distinction between an appeal from acquittal
and an appeal from conviction so far as
powers of the appellate court are concerned,
certain unwritten rules of adjudication have
consistently been followed by Judges while
dealing with appeals against acquittal. No
doubt, the High Court has full power to
review the evidence and to arrive at its own
independent conclusion whether the appeal is
against conviction or acquittal. But while
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dealing with an appeal against acquittal the
appellate court has to bear in mind: first,
that there is a general presumption in
favour of the innocence of the person
accused in criminal cases and that
presumption is only strengthened by the
acquittal. The second is, every accused is
entitled to the benefit of reasonable doubt
regarding his guilt and when the trial court
acquitted him, he would retain that benefit
in the appellate court also. Thus, the
appellate court in appeals against
acquittals has to proceed more cautiously
and only if there is absolute assurance of
the guilt of the accused, upon the evidence
on record, that the order of acquittal is
liable to be interfered with or disturbed.
When we scrutinised the evidence we were not satisfied
of the reasons set out by the High Court for disturbing the
order of acquittal of A-2 to A-4. Nonetheless, while
dealing with the appeal of A-1 Ranbir Singh we have to
point out that both the trial court and the High Court
relied on evidence of PW-1 Sandeep after scanning the
evidence from different angles. The witness has clearly
spoken to the role of that accused. We have no reason to
dissent from the said finding regarding reliability of the
testimony of PW-1 so far as the first appellant is
concerned.
Learned counsel for the appellant, however, contended
that the evidence of PW-1 has not been corroborated and
that the confession of Ranbir Singh as recorded by PW-2 as
Magistrate should not have been received in evidence. She
elaborated her contention that his confession was not
protected under Section 161 of the Code.
PW-2 Mrs. Vivek Bharti Sharma was the Judicial
Magistrate of 1st Class, Hissar. She deposed that on
12.10.1991 a person calling himself Ranbir Singh had rushed
into the court at 10.05 A.M. when the Magistrate was
sitting on the dais and that person produced a knife from a
sealed packet. As he wanted his confession to be recorded
by the Magistrate PW-2 administered oath to him and
recorded the confession. The Magistrate said in her
deposition that as a matter of fact she did not know Ranbir
Singh personally and that she did not verify whether the
person appearing before her was really Ranbir Singh. In
this context we reproduce Section 164(1) of the Code here:
164. Recording of confession and
statements.- (1) Any Metropolitan Magistrate
or Judicial Magistrate may, whether or not
he has jurisdiction in the case, record any
confession or statement made to him in the
course of an investigation under this
Chapter or under any other law for the time
being in force, or at any time afterwards
before the commencement of the inquiry or
trial;
Provided that no confession shall be
recorded by a police officer on whom any
power of a Magistrate has been conferred
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under any law for the time being in force.
The sub-section makes it clear that the power of the
Magistrate to record any confession or statement made to
him could be exercised only in the course of investigation
under Chapter XII of the Code. The section is intended to
take care of confessional as well as non-confessional
statements. Confession could be made only by one who is
either an accused or suspected to be an accused of a crime.
Sub-sections (2), (3) and (4) are intended to cover
confessions alone, de hors non-confessional statements
whereas sub-section (5) is intended to cover such
statements. A three Judge Bench of this Court in Jogendra
Nahak and ors. vs. State of Orissa and ors. {2000 (1) SCC
272} has held that so far as statements (other than
confession) are concerned they cannot be recorded by a
Magistrate unless the person (who makes such statement) was
produced or sponsored by investigating officer. But the
Bench has distinguished that aspect from the confession
recording for which the following observations have been
specifically made:
There can be no doubt that a confession of
the accused can be recorded by a Magistrate.
An accused is a definite person against whom
there would be an accusation and the
Magistrate can ascertain whether he is in
fact an accused person. Such a confession
can be used against the maker thereof. If
it is a confessional statement, the
prosecution has to rely on it against the
accused.
We have no doubt that an accused person can appear
before a Magistrate and it is not necessary that such
accused should be produced by the police for recording the
confession. But it is necessary that such appearance must
be in the course of an investigation under Chapter XII of
the Code. If the Magistrate does not know that he is
concerned in a case for which investigation has been
commenced under the provisions of Chapter XII it is not
permissible for him to record the confession. If any
person simply barges into the court and demands the
Magistrate to record his confession as he has committed a
cognizable offence, the course open to the Magistrate is to
inform the police about it. The police in turn has to take
the steps envisaged in Chapter XII of the Code. It may be
possible for the Magistrate to record a confession if he
has reason to believe that investigation has commenced and
that the person who appeared before him demanding recording
of his confession is concerned in such case. Otherwise the
court of a Magistrate is not a place into which all and
sundry can gatecrash and demand the Magistrate to record
whatever he says as self-incriminatory.
As the confession recorded by PW-2 cannot be brought
under Section 164 of the Code it is an idle exercise to
consider whether it was voluntary or true. We may again
point out, PW-2 has not stated that before taking down the
confession he explained to Ranbir Singh that he was not
bound to make the confession, and that if he did so, such
confession might be used as evidence against him. This is
sine qua non for recording a confession. Further a
Magistrate is forbidden from recording any such confession
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until he gets satisfaction that the person is going to make
a voluntary confession. There is nothing in the evidence
of PW-2 that he had adopted such precaution. For all those
reasons we keep that document out of the ken of
consideration in this case.
What remains as corroboration for the evidence of PW-1
Sandeep is the testimony of his father PW-10 Nafe Singh.
That witness has said that soon after the occurrence PW-1
Sandeep rushed to him and told him about the occurrence.
PW-10 has narrated the details of what he heard from his
son. In fact PW-10 narrated them in the First Information
Statement which he has lodged with the police. It gives
the court an assurance that PW-10 really heard those
details from his son Sandeep (PW-1). Section 157 of the
Evidence Act permits the court to use any former statement
made by a witness before any person relating to a fact if
it was made at or about the time when the fact took
place. The interval between the occurrence and the time of
PW-1s reporting to his father, did not cross the
boundaries envisaged by the words at or about the time
when the fact took place in Section 157 of the Evidence
Act. It is useful to refer to the decision of this Court
in State of Tamil Nadu vs. Suresh and anr. {1998 (2) SCC
372}. Following passage in that decision will be apposite:
We think that the expression at or about
the time when the fact took place in
Section 157 of the Evidence Act should be
understood in the context according to the
facts and circumstance of each case. The
mere fact that there was an intervening
period of a few days, in a given case, may
not be sufficient to exclude the statement
from the use envisaged in Section 157 of the
Act. The test to be adopted, therefore, is
this: Did the witness have the opportunity
to concoct or to have been tutored? In this
context the observation of Vivian Bose, J.
in Rameshwar v. State of Rajasthan is
apposite:
There can be no hard and fast rule
about the at or about condition in
Section 157. The main test is whether
the statement was made as early as can
reasonably be expected in the
circumstances of the case and before
there was opportunity for tutoring or
concoction.
The upshot of the above discussion is that we have to
confirm the conviction and sentence passed on appellant
Ranbir Singh. We do so. We dismiss the appeal filed by
him. But we allow the appeals filed by the other three
appellants (Mahabir Singh, Sultan and Sis Pal), and the
conviction and sentence passed on them as per the impugned
judgment of the Division Bench of the High Court will stand
set aside and the order of acquittal passed in their favour
by the trial court will stand restored.
[ K.T. Thomas ]
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[ R.P. Sethi ]
July 26, 2001.