Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RATAN RAI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF BIHAR
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
30/01/1956
BENCH:
ACT:
Reference-jury trial-judge disagreeing with the verdict-
Procedure-Duty of counsel-High Court-If can accept majority
verdict without considering the entire evidence-Supreme
Court If should adopt the Procedure--Code of Criminal
Procedure (Act V of 1898), as amended by Act XXVI of 1955 s.
307.
HEADNOTE:
The appellants were charged under ss., 435 and 436 of the
Indian Penal Code and were tried by a jury, who returned a
majority verdict of guilty. The Assistant Sessions judge
disagreed with the said verdict and made a reference to the
High Court.
At the hearing of the reference the counsel for the
appellants only contended that the charge to the jury was
defective, and did not place the entire evidence before the
judges, who only considered the objections’ urged, and
nothing more, and held the
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reference to be incompetent and found the appellants guilty
and convicted them.
Held, that in a reference under s. 307 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure it was the duty of counsel to place, and
-it was incumbent on the High Court to consider, the entire
evidence and the charge as framed and placed before the jury
and to come to its own conclusion, after giving due weight
to the opinion of the trial judge and the verdict of the
jury, and to acquit or convict the accused of the offences
of which the jury could have convicted or acquitted him. It
was wrong of the’ High Court to pass judgment without
considering the entire evidence.
It is not proper for the Supreme Court to adopt the
procedure of considering the entire evidence and come to a
conclusion which according to the provisions of s.307(3) of
the Code of Criminal Procedure the High Court should have
done.
Akhlakali Hayatalli v. The State of Bombay, (1954) S.C.R.
435 and Ramanugrah Singh v. The Emperor, A.I.R. T946 P.C.
151, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 104
of 1955.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order’ dated
September 9, 1953, of the Patna High Court in Jury Reference
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No. I of 1952 arising out of the ReferencE made on February
16, 1952, by the Assistant Sessions Judge, 2nd Court,
Chapra, in connection with Sessions Trial No. 81 of 1951.
S. P. Verma, for the appellants Nos. 2 and 3.
B. K. Saran and R. C. Prasad, for the respondent.
1957. January 30. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
BHAGWATI J.-The appellants Nos. 2 and 3, who are the
surviving appellants after the death of appellant No. 1
during the pendency of this appeal, were charged with having
committed offences under ss. 435 and 436 of the Indian Penal
Code and were tried by the Second Assistant Sessions Judge
of Saran, Chapra, with the aid of a jury. The jury returned
a majority verdict that both of them were guilty of the
offences under those sections. The Assistant Sessions Judge
disagreed with the said verdict and made a reference to the
High Court of Judicature at Patna,
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under s. 307 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. The said
reference was heard by a Division Bench of that High Court.
The learned judges of the High Court overruled the
contentions which were urged before them in regard to the
charge to the jury being defective and further held that the
reference was, in the circumstances, not competent. They,
however, without anything more accepted the majority verdict
and held the appellants guilty of the offences under ss. 435
and 436 of the Indian Penal Code and sentenced them to six
months’ rigorous imprisonment each. The appellants obtained
from this Court special leave to appeal under Art. 136 of
the Constitution and hence this appeal.
The facts leading up to this appeal may be shortly stated as
follows:-There was a dispute between the parties as to title
to plot No. 1100 of village Rampur, Tengrahi. One Kailash
Rai claimed to be the owner of -that plot and also claimed
to be in possession of a Palani standing in a portion of
that plot as also of a Punjaul, i.e., a haystack in its
vicinity. There had been proceedings under s. 144 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure in regard to this area leading up
to a title ,suit being T.S. No. 58/8 of 1948 /50 filed by
Kailash Rai against the appellants in regard to the same. A
decree had been pawed on December 16, 1950, in that title
suit dismissing the claim of Kailash Rai. An appeal had
been filed by Kailash Rai against that decree and that
appeal was pending at the date of the occurrence. On March
4, 1951, Kailash Rai was sitting in the Palani and at about
3 to 4 p.m. a mob consisting of about 100 to 125 persons
including the appellants all armed with lathes, bhallas and
pharsas came to the Palani and began to demolish the same.
Kailash Rai remonstrated and the deceased appellant No. 1,
ordered that the Palai should be set on fire. The appellant
No. 2 thereupon set fire to the Palani with a match stick
and the appellant No. 3 set fire to the Punjaul. The first
information report of this occurrence was lodged at
Gopalganj Police Station at 8 p.m. the same night. The
officer in charge of Gopalganj Police Station investigated
the case and
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challaned the appellants charging them with having
committed, offences under ss. 435 and 436 of the Indian
Penal Code.
The Committing Court found a prima facie case made out
against the appellants and sent them up for trial by the
Assistant Sessions Judge, Second Court, Chapra, who tried
them by a jury. The jury returned a majority verdict of
guilty against the appellants. The Assistant Sessions
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Judge, however, disagreed with that verdict and made a
reference to the High Court stating in the letter of
reference that on the evidence recorded before him the
appellants had been in possession of the Palani and the
Punjaul but were dispossessed of the same some time prior to
the passing of the decree in the title suit on December
16,1950, and were therefore justified in taking steps for
recovery of possession thereof from Kailash Rai on March 4,
195 1, and if in that process the appellants set fire to the
Palani and the Punjaul they were only destroying their own
property and were not guilty of the offence of committing
mischief by fire as alleged by the prosecution. The
Assistant Sessions Judge tried to analyse the working of the
minds of the jury in arriving at the verdict which they did
and though he agreed with the alleged finding of fact
reached by the jury in regard to the possession of the
Palani and the Punjaul, disagreed with the law as allegedly
applied by the jury and therefore disagreed with the
majority verdict.
When the reference was heard before the High Court, the
counsel for the appellants only contended that the charge
addressed by the Assistant Sessions Judge to the jury was
defective and he did not invite the High Court, as he should
have done, to consider the entire evidence and to acquit or
convict the appellants of the offences of which the jury
could have convicted them upon the charges framed and placed
before it, after giving due weight to the opinions of the
learned Sessions Judge and the jury as required by a. 307
(3) of the Code of Criminal Procedure. The High Court,
therefore, only considered the objections which had been
urged by the learned counsel for the appellants before it in
regard to the charge being defective and
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overruled them, accepted the majority verdict, convicted the
appellants and -sentenced them as above.
We are of opinion that in so doing the High Court was
clearly in error and acted in violation of the provisions of
s. 307 (3) of the Code of Criminal Procedure. Section 307
(3) provides:-
In dealing with the case so submitted the High Court may
exercise any of the powers which it may exercise on an
appeal, and subject thereto it shall, after considering the
entire evidence and after giving due weight to the opinions
of the Sessions Judge and the jury, acquit or convict such
accused of any offence of which the jury could have
convicted him upon the charge framed and placed before it;
and, if it convicts him, may pass such sentence a,% might
have been passed by the Court of Sessions."
We had occasion to consider this provision in Akhlakali
Hayatalli v. The State of Bombay(1) where we approved of the
following observations of their Lordships of the Privy
Council in Ramanugrah Singh v. The Emperor(2):
" The powers of the High Court in dealing with the reference
are contained in sub-section (3). It may exercise any of
the powers. which it might exercise upon an appeal, and this
includes the power to call fresh evidence conferred by s.
428. The Court must consider the whole case and give due
weight to the opinions of the Sessions Judge and jury, and
then acquit or convict the accused. In their Lordships’
view, the paramount consideration in the High Court must be
whether the ends of justice require that. the verdict of the
jury should be set aside. In general, if the evidence is
such that it can properly support a verdict either of
guilty, or. not guilty according to the view taken of it by
the trial Court, and if the jury take one view of the
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evidence and the, judge thinks that they should have taken
the other, the view of the jury must prevail, since they are
the judges of fact. In such a case a reference is not
justified, and it is only by accepting their view that the
High Court can give due weight to the opinion of the jury.
It, however,
(I) [1954] S.C.R. 435. 442.
(2) A.I.R. 1946 P.C. 151, 154.
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the High Court considers that upon the evidence no
reasonable body- of men could have reached the conclusion
arrived at by the jury, then the reference was justified and
the ends of justice required that the verdict be
disregarded."
This wag pronounced by us to be the correct method of
approach in a reference under s. 307 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure. It was incumbent on the High Court when the
reference was heard by it to consider the entire evidence
and come to its own conclusion whether the evidence was such
that it could properly support the verdict of guilty against
the appellants. If the High Court came to the conclusion
that the evidence was such that it was possible for the jury
to take the view that it did even though the judge thought
that they should have taken another view the reference would
not have been justified and the High Court should have
accepted the opinion of the jury. If the High Court was
however of opinion upon the evidence that no reasonable body
of men could have reached the conclusion arrived at by the
jury the reference would have been quite justified and the
ends of justice required that the verdict should be
disregarded. The High Court, however, only considered the
arguments in regard to the defect in the charge to the jury
addressed before it by the learned counsel for the
appellants and did not consider the entire evidence which
was on the record before it. In not having done so, we are
clearly of opinion that it violated the provisions of s. 307
(3) of the Code of Criminal Procedure.
We are accordingly of opinion that the judgment of the High
Court accepting the majority verdict and convicting the
appellants and sentencing them as above without considering
the entire evidence was clearly wrong and the conviction of
the appellants and the sentences passed upon them should be
set aside.
We were invited by learned counsel for the parties appearing
before us to consider the entire evidence for ourselves and
come to the conclusion which, according to the provisions of
s. 307 (3) of the Code of Criminal Procedure, I he High
Court should have done. We do
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not think that is the proper procedure to adopt and we
therefore allow the- appeal, and remand this matter to the
High Court to act in accordance with the provisions of s.
307 (3) of the Code of Criminal Procedure and deal with the
same in accordance with law. The appellants Will continue
on the same bail as before.
Appeal allowed.