Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
PURAN SINGH & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF PUNJAB
DATE OF JUDGMENT25/04/1975
BENCH:
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
BENCH:
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
UNTWALIA, N.L.
CITATION:
1975 AIR 1674 1975 SCR 299
1975 SCC (4) 518
CITATOR INFO :
R 1976 SC2263 (11)
F 1977 SC 619 (4)
E 1990 SC1459 (36)
ACT:
Penal Code-S. 99 to 102-Private defence when can be
exercised-"Settled possession" meaning of.
HEADNOTE:
All the appellants were convicted by the Sessions Judge
under s. 302 read with s. 149 I.P.C. and s. 326 read with
149 I.P.C. and sentenced to life imprisonment. The High
Court affirmed the conviction and sentence.
In a dispute over land between the party of the appellants
and the complainant, the appellants alleged that they had
redeemed the mortgage in respect of the land and thereafter
the mortgagee had himself delivered possession of the land
and that they had grown wheat crop in it. The complainant,
to whom the mortgagee sold his mortgage rights, tried to
take its possession forcibly. It was alleged that on the
day of the occurrence the complainant and his party, armed
with deadly weapons, entered the disputed land and tried to
destroy the wheat crop. In the scuffle that ensued two
persons of the complainant’s party died and some persons on
both sides were injured. On the question of possession of
the land the High Court gave a finding in favour of the
appellants but on its own interpretation of the decision of
this Court in Munshi Ram and Others v. Delhi Administration
held that the appellants who were not in settled possession
of the land, were rank trespassers and secondly that,
instead of indulging in a free fight with the opposite
party, the appellants could have taken recourse to the
public authorities, Since the appellants had exceeded the
limitations provided in s. 99 to 102 I.P.C. they could not
claim any right of private defence.
Allowing the appeal,
HELD : (1) It is difficult to lay down any hard and fast
rule as to when the possession of a trespasser can mature
into settled possession. But what this Court really meant
was that the possession of a trespasser must be effective,
undisturbed and to the knowledge of the owner or without any
attempt at concealment. There is no special charm or magic
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in the words settled possession" nor is it a ritualistic
formula which can be confined in a strait jacket but it has
been used to mean such clear and effective possession of a
person, even if he is a trespasser, who gets the right under
the criminal law to defend his property against attack even
by the true owner. The nature of possession in such cases
which may entitle a trespasser to exercise the right of
private defence of property and person should contain the
following attributes : (1) that the trespasser must be in
actual physical possession of the property over a
sufficiently long period; (ii) that the possession must be
within the knowledge either express or implied, of the owner
or- without any attempt at concealment and which contains an
element of animus possendie. The nature of possession of
the trespasser would however be a matter to be decided on
facts and circumstances of each case (iii) the process of
dispossession of the true owner by the trespasser must be
complete and final and must be acquiesced in by the true
owner; (iv) that one of the usual tests to determine the
quality of settled possession, in the case of culturable
land, would be whether or not the trespasser, after having
taken possession, had grown any crop. If the crop had been
grown by the trespasser. then even the true owner has no
right to destroy the crop grown by the trespasser and take
forcible possession. In such a case the trespasser will
have
300
a right of private defence and the true owner will have no
right of private defence. [307E-H, 308A-D]
it is manifest that the finding of the High Court on the
facts of the present case that the appellants were not in
settled possession of the land is legally erroneous and
cannot be allowed to stand. The ratio of the judgment of
this Court in Munshi Ram’s case his not been correctly
applied by the High Court. [310-C-D]
Munshi Ram and others v. Delhi Administration, [1968] 2
S.C.R. 455 explained and followed.
Horam and others v. Rex, A.I.R. 1949 All. 564, 567 Sangappa
and others v. State, I.L. R. [1955] Hyd. 406, In re : Mooka
Nadar, and others A.I.R. [1943] Mad. 590, Hazara Singh and
others v. The State, A.I.R. 1959 Punjab 570.Bhartu v.
State. A.I.R. 1954 All. 35=(1954) Cr. I.J. 54 Phula Singh
v. Emperor A.I.R. 1927 Lah. 705=28 Crl. L.J. 848,
referred to.
(2)The appellants were protected by the right of private
defence of their property and person and the prosecution
case against the appellants, which has not been proved
beyond reasonable doubt must fail. It is not the law that a
person when called upon to face in assault must run away to
the police station and not protect himself or when his
property has been the subject matter of trespass and
mischief he should allow the aggressor to take possession of
the property while he should run to the public authorities.
Where there is an attribute of invasion or aggression on the
property by a person who has no right to possession then
there is obviously no room to have recourse to the public
authorities and the accused has an undoubted right to resist
the attack and use even force if necessary. The right of
private defence of property or person, where there is real
apprehension that the aggressor might cause death or
grievous hurt to the victim, could extend to the causing of
death also and it is not necessary that death or grievous
hurt should actually be caused before the right could be
exercised. A mere reasonable apprehension is enough to put
the right of private defence into operation.
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[311-B-D]
Jai Dev, v. The State of Punjab [1963] 3 S.C.R. 489 and
Amjad Khan v. The State, [1952] S.C.R. 567, followed.
In the present case it could not be said that the appellants
had exceeded the right of private defence. The appellants
were undoubtedly in possession of the laid and had grown
wheat crop and the prosecution party had tried to destroy
the wheat crop. The appellants were entitled to resist the
invasion of their right by the prosecution party. Again it
cannot be said that the apPellants had in any event exceeded
their right of private defence. As the prosecution bad
deliberately suppressed the very material part of the origin
of the occurrence it is not known how the occurrence
started. Secondly when two persons on the side of the
accused were injured by gun fire it was not possible for
them to weigh their blows in golden scales in order to
assault the prosecution party. After two members of their
party had received gun shot injuries the appellants would
have undoubtedly it reasonable, apprehension that either
death or grievous hurt could be caused to the members of
their party or one of them. This being the position they
were fully justified in causing the death of the deceased
Persons in exercise of their right of private defence of
person. Such an apprehension could not be said to be
hypersensitive or based on no ground and it will be idle to
content that the appellants could have waited until one of
their party members would have die or received serious
injuries before acting on the spur of moment, nor could one
expect a person who is attacked by an aggressor to modulate
his blows in accordance with the injuries he received.
[312E-H, 313G-H, 314ABC]
State of Gujarat V. Sai Fatima & Anr. [1975] 3 S.C.R. 993,
followed.
301
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeal No. 266 of
1971.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
the 10th February, 1971 of the Punjab and Haryana High Court
in Criminal Appeal No. 1034 of 1969.
R. K. Garg, S. C. Agarwala and V. J. Francis, for the
appellants.
O. P. Sharma and M. S. Dhillon, for respondent,
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
FAZAL ALI, J.-The appellants Puran Singh, Piara Singh,
Bakshish Singh, Bohar Singh and Balkar Singh have been
convicted under S. 302/149 I.P.C. and sentenced to life
imprisonment and a fine of Rs. 200 each and in default six
months rigorous imprisonment and under ss. 326/149 I.P.C. to
one year rigorous imprisonment and under s. 148 I.P.C. to
one year simple imprisonment. The learned Sessions Judge
who tried the present case has also convicted one Pargat
Singh the brother of Baksbish Singh and son of Charan Singh
but this ,accused has been acquitted by the High Court of
Punjab and Haryana hereinafter referred to as ’the High
Court’. The High Court, has, however, affirmed the
conviction and sentences of the five appellants and
dismissed the appeal filed by the appellants before it-hence
this appeal to this Court by special leave.
It is not necessary for us to detail the facts of this case,
because the decision of the matter lies within a very narrow
compass. Mr. R. K. Garg appearing for the appellants has
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raised a few questions of law and according to his
submissions the appeal should succeed on the question of law
on the basis of the findings given by the High Court. The
unfortunate incident in the present case which led to the
loss of two valuable lives appears to be the result of
chronic land dispute between the parties and a competitive
race for taking possession of the land by the prosecution or
the accused. The story opens with a usufructuary mortgage
which was executed by Hari Singh the original owner in
respect of 29 Kanals 14 Murlas of land in favour of the
appellants Puran Singh and Piara Singh and one Nishan Singh
for a sum of Rs. 3000/-. Soon thereafter the mortgagees
sold their montage rights to Makhan Singh father of Dilbagh
Singh of the prosecution party. On July 28, 1966 the
appellants Puran Singh and Piara Singh and one Smt. Chandra
daughter of the appellant Bakshish Singh purchased the
equity of redemption in the said land from Hari Singh for a
sum of Rs. 20,000 and undertook to liquidate the mortgage
debt. According to the defence the mortgage debt was
actually discharged on May 30, 1967 and a few months later
mutation was sanctioned in favour of the accused on July 13,
1967. Having, however, failed to take possession of the
mortgage property after having redeemed the mortgage, the
purchasers of the equity of redemption, namely, the party of
the appellants filed a suit for possession against Dilbagh
Singh in the Court of the Subordinate Judge, Hoshiarpur on
October 4, 1967. One of the dates fixed in this suit was
October 27, 1968 when, according to the prosecution, Puran
Singh, Piara Singh,
302
Bakshish Singh, Pargat Singh and Chandra Singh entered the
land in dispute and demolished the kothas of the
complainant. A complaint was filed by Dilbagh Singh on
October 30, 1968 against the accused and Ajmer Singh Sub-
Inspector of Police alleging that the accused had entered
the land and demolished the kothas belonging to the comp-
lainant with the active aid of the police. In this com-
plaint although the complainant did not admit in so many
words that the accused had taken forcible posses-,ion of the
land and demolished the kothas, yet from the facts and
circumstances proved in this case there was no doubt that it
was a fact that the complainant in spite of his best
attempts was dispossessed by the party of the accused.
While the complaint was being enquired into, the suit filed
by Puran Singh and others was dismissed on November 21, 1968
on the ground that the suit was not maintainable and the
plaint was returned to the plaintiffs for presentation to
the proper authorities, namely, Revenue Courts. Emboldened
by this success in a civil suit, it appears that the
complainant Dilbagh Singh along with Sohan Singh Bachan
Singh, Sulakhan Singh, Baj Singh and others went to the
field in question and started ploughing it and sowing
Sarson. We might mention here that the definite case of the
accused has been that after taking possession of the land in
question from the complainant the appellants bad grown wheat
in the land and on the date of occurrence the complainant
party tried to destroy the crop which led to mutual fight
between the accused and the complainant party resulting in
the death of the two deceased persons of the prosecution
party and according to the defence injuries on Mohan Singh
and Bohar Singh who were on the side of the accused.
According to the prosecution while the prosecution party was
busy ploughing the land and sowing Sarson crop in the field
all the appellants variously armed with gun, barchhas,
kirpans, gandasis and axes entered upon the land and Pargat
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Singh fired his gun as a result of which Dilbagh Singh and
Bachan Singh fled away leaving the two deceased persons and
Sohan Singh behind. Thereafter the accused Puran Singh and
Piara Singh surrounded Sulakhan Singh and inflicted various
injuries. on his body with kirpans, while Bakshish Singh
gave spear blows in the thigh and abdomen of Sulakhan Singh
The appellants Balkar Singh, Puran Singh and Piara Singh
inflicted with their respective weapons blows on Baj Singh,
Soban Singh P. W. 9 who tried to rescue his brother was also
assaulted by Balkar Singh, Bohar Singh and Bakshish Singh.
Puran Singh and Piara Singh are also alleged to have
assaulted Sohan Singh with their weapons. The victims then
fell down on the ground and then the accused made good their
escape. The three injured persons were removed to the civil
hospital at Hoshiarpur but Sulakhan Singh succumbed to his
injuries on the way while Baj Singh and Sohan Singh were
admitted in the hospital. The F.I.R. was lodged on November
27, 1968 by Baj Singh one of the injured persons on the
basis of which the present case started and after usual
investigation a charge-sheet was submitted against the
accused which resulted in their ultimate conviction and
sentences as mentioned above.
303
The defence of the appellants was that they had redeemed the
mortgage debt and thereafter the mortgagee had himself
delivered possession of the land to the appellants some time
in 1968, and since then the appellants were in peaceful
possession of the land and had grown wheat crop therein.
Dilbagh Singh being dissatisfied with his having to part
with the possession of the property filed a false complaint
against the appellants and thereafter tried to take forcible
possession of the land from the appellants with the show of
force. According to the defence, the prosecution party was
also armed with gun, axe, kirpans and other deadly weapons
and the accused tried to resist their being dispossessed and
assaulted the prosecution party purely in the exercise of
their right of private defence of person and property.
According to the &fence two persons on their side were
injured one of them Mohan Singh had received gun-shot
injury, whereas Bohar Singh had also received gun-shot
injuries. The High Court after discussing the evidence
appear to have given a finding in favour of the accused so
far as the question of possession of the land is concerned,
but in view of the decision of this Court in Munshi Ram and
Others v. Delhi Administration,(1) on its own interpreta-
tion, held that as the appellants were not in settled
possession of the land and were rank trespassers they could
not have any right of private defence.
Appearing for the appellants Mr. Garg submitted that the
High Court had,taken an erroneous view of the law and had
misinterpreted the judgment of this Court in Munshi Ram’s
case (supra). Before, however, coming to the judgment we
would like to extract the findings of fact arrived at by the
High Court on the question of possession which forms the
basis of the right of private defence claimed by the
accused. In this connection the High Court found as
follows:
"Certain admissions wrong out from the
prosecution witness in cross-examination,
however, do show that about one month or so
prior to the occurrence, the vendee-appellants
had somehow entered upon the disputed land and
taken its physical possession, and had
possibly sown wheat crop in
it......................
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After some prevarication, witness admitted
that on the day of occurrence Dilbagh Singh
had told him that they should go and plough
the field and take its possession. Witness
thereupon took the kulhari from the house of
Dilbagh Singh and proceeded to the place of
occurrence with the deceased persons. Sohan
Singh does not say a word that they had sowed
or were sowing wheat crop at the time of
occurrence in this field. He stated that at
about 5 P.M. they were busy sowing sarson in
the field...............
Dilbagh Singh, P.W. 12, in examination-in-
chief stated that about one month before the
occurrence, all the accused, excepting Bohar
Singh and Balkar Singh, had demolished his
kothas in the disputed field with the help of
the Police...
(1) [1968] 2 SCR 455.
304
Though in this complaint it is not
specifically alleged that Puran Singh, Piara
Singh etc., had taken forcible possession of
the land, yet the same read with the admission
made by P. W. Sohan Singh already referred to
above, shows that Dilbagh Singh had been
ousted from possession of the land on the 27th
October, 1968, and thereafter the appellants
continued in its actual possession till the
occurrence took
place................... In Rabi 1968, as has
been deposed to by Patwari Behari Lal, P.W.
14, wheat crop was standing in the disputed
khasra 17/9 when he inspected the harvest at
the spot in April 7, 1969.
In the visual site-plan, Exhibit PZ, which,
according to A.S.I. Kartar Singh, was prepared
by him on November 27, 1968, it is mentioned
that the field was under wheat cultivation.
It is unfortunate that no quest-on was put to
the A.S.I. in cross-examination to show as to
what was the size of the wheat crop.
...................................................
If at the time of occurrence, sprouted wheat
crop was in the field and if, as has been
deposed to by P.W. Sohan Singh, the
complainant party had gone there armed to take
back the possession from the accused party,
this wheat crop might have been sown by the
vendee-appellants some days prior to the
occurrence. Though the facts elicited in the
cross-examination of the prosecution witnesses
or otherwise brought on record fall short of
positive proof of this wheat crop having been
sown by Piara Singh and Puran Singh
appellants, yet the possibility of that being
a fact cannot be ruled out.
Thus, even if the view most favourable to the
accused, of the evidence on record is taken,
then also the possession of the appellants,
which commenced about one month prior to the
occurrence, was little better than that of a
trespasser. It is now settled law that even a
person rightfully entitled to immediate actual
possession has no right to oust a trespasser
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by force if that trespasser is in settled
possession of the land. Such a trespasser in
established possession is entitled-unless he
is rejected in due course of law-to defend his
possession even against the rightful tenure-
bolder or owner. This is what was laid down
by their Lordships of the Supreme Court in
Munshi Ram v. Delhi Administration A.I.R. 1968
S.C. 702."
From these findings of the High Court, which are based on
the admissions of some of the prosecution witnesses and are
corroborated by the circumstances proved by the prosecution,
it is quite clear that the party of the appellants had
undoubtedly taken possession of the land in dispute to the
knowledge of the complainant Dilbagh Singh at least a month
before the occurrence and had sown wheat crop on the land in
question. In fact this finding is based on very cogent
305
material because it would appear that P.W. Sohan Singh one
of the eye witness clearly stated in his evidence that about
a month before the occurrence Puran Singh and Piara Singh
took possession of the land with the help of the police.
This witness further admitted as follows :
"Dilbagh Singh did tell me that we should go
and plough the field and take its possession.
I had taken the Kulhari from the house of
Dilbagh Singh in the field."
He further admitted in his evidence that after the kothas
were demolished, Dilbagh Singh used to live in the village.
This also corroborates the fact that the complainant’s party
was dispossessed on October 27, 1968, when the accused bad
taken forcible possession of the land and since then the
complainant Dilbagh Singh had started living with Sohan
Singh in the village.
Similarly another eye witness P. W. 10 Jagtar Singh admitted
that lie did state to the police that the appellant Puran
Singh had taken forcible possession of the land about one
month earlier.
P.W. 12 Dilbagh Singh, the complainant himself deposed that
he had stated before the police that they had sown Sarson as
well as wheat in the field and when he was confronted with
his previous statement before the police where he had
mentioned the fact that he and his companions had ploughed
the field and were preparing the furrows or sowing Sarson.
The witness further admitted in his evidence that most of
the crop was, however, wheat.
P.W. 14 Behari Lal, Patwari, has stated that he effected the
Girdawri on April 7, 1969 and found wheat crop standing in
Khasra No. 16/2 and 16/9 which was shown to be in possession
of Puran Singh. The evidence of this witness fully
corroborates the evidence of the prosecution witnesses that
the accused party had dispossessed the complainant from the
land in dispute as far back as October 27, 1968 which led to
the filing of the complaint by Dilbagh Singh and thereafter
it was the accused party and not the prosecution party which
had sown wheat crop on the land.
Finally, even in the F.I.R. it appears that the informant
had admitted in categorical terms that the accused Piara
Singh and Puran Singh had taken forcible possession of the
land. This statement runs thus :
"Dilbagh Singh had been in possession of this
land, but some days after the Dewali, Piara
Singh and Puran Singh took forcible possession
of this land. Now, some days ago, both the
above mentioned cases were decided in favour
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of Dilbagh Singh. So, yesterday the 26th
November, 1968 at about 4 P.M., Dilbagh Singh
along with his brother Gurbachan Singh having
taken myself (Baj Singh) and both of my
brothers Sulakhan Singh and Soban Singh with
him, ploughed this land."
306
On a consideration of the admissions of the prosecution
witnesses and the findings arrived at by the High Court, the
following propositions of fact emerge:
(1)That although the accused had purchased
the equity of redemption, yet there is no
reliable evidence to show that they had paid
off the mortgage debt and taken possession
from the mortgagee in spite of the fact that
mutation was sanctioned in favour of the
appellants in 1967. The High Court has
rightly pointed out that if the appellants
party had taken possession as far back as in
1967 there would be no occasion for them to
file a civil suit for possession on October 4,
1967 against the mortgagee, Dilbagh Singh and
others;
(2)That on October 27, 1968 the appellants
undoubtedly entered the field and took
forcible possession of the land from the
complainants who were unable to resist the
entry of the accused as a result of which
Dilbagh Singh filed a complaint on October 30,
1968. It is not necessary for us to say
anything regarding the allegation about demo-
lishing of the Kothas;
(3)The complainant knew fully well that he
had been dispossessed by the appellants at
least a month before the occurrence and that
the appellants bad sown wheat crop and in
spite of his knowledge he deliberately went
there with the avowed object of taking
forcible possession from the appellants;
(4)That on the date of occurrence the
prosecution party undoubtedly went to the
field armed with the gun and axe. It would
appear from the injuries on Bohar Singh and
Mohan Singh on the side of the accused that
the present occurrence took place as a result
of mutual fight over the land; and
(5)that although the defence has proved
beyond reasonable doubt that both Mohan Singh
and Bohar Singh bad received injuries on their
person, the prosecution has given no
explanation for the same.
The question that’ arises for consideration is whetherin
view of these findings of fact it can be said that the
accusedhad no right of private defence or that the
prosecution party inentering upon the land was
protected by the right of privatedefence of property.
This brings us to the consideration of the decision of this
Court--Munshi Ram and Others v. Delhi Administration(1) on
which great reliance has been placed by the High Court,
where this Court observed as follows:
"It is true that no one including the true
owner has a right to dispossess the trespasser
by force if the trespasser
(1)[1968] 2 S.C.R. 455.
307
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is in settled possession of the land and in
such a case unless he is evicted in due course
of law, he is entitled to defend his
possession even against the rightful owner.
But stray or even intermittent acts of
trespass do not give such a right against the
true owner. The possession which a trespasser
is entitled to defend against the rightful
owner must be a settled possession extending
over a sufficiently long period and acquiesced
in by the true owner. A casual act of
possession would not have the effect of
interrupting the possession of the rightful
owner. The rightful owner may re-enter and
reinstate himself provided he does not use
more force than necessary. Such entry will be
viewed only as a resistance to an intrusion
upon possession which has never been lost.
The persons in possession by a stray act of
trespass, a possession which has not matured
into settled possession, constitute an
unlawful assembly, giving right to the true
owner, though not in actual possession at the
time, to remove the obstruction even by using
necessary force."
In this case there was a concurrent finding of fact that
Jamuna was in effective possession of the field on the date
of occurrence and the prosecution had alleged that P.Ws 17
and I had taken possession of the property but the finding
of the Court was that P.Ws 17 and 19 had not been put in
possession by virtue of the delivery of possession given by
the Court. It was against this context that the
observations referred to above were made. This
Court clearly pointed out that where a trespasser was in
settled possession of the land he is not entitled to be
evicted except in due course of law and be is further
entitled to resist or defend his possession even against the
rightful owner who tries to dispossess him. The only
condition laid down by this Court was that the possession of
the trespasser must be settled possession. The Court
explained that the settled possession must be extended over
a sufficiently long period and acquiesced in by the true
owner. This particular expression has persuaded the High
Court to hold that since the possession of the appellants
party in this case was only a month old, it cannot be deemed
to be a settled possession. We, however, think that this is
not what this Court meant in defining the nature of the
settled possession. It is indeed difficult to lay down any
hard and fast rule as to when the possession of a trespasser
can mature into a settled possession. But what this Court
really meant was that the possession of a trespasser must be
effective, undisturbed and to the knowledge of the owner or
without any attempt at concealment. For instance a stray or
a casual act of possession would not amount to settled
possession. There is no special charm or magic in the word
’settled possession’ nor is it a ritualistic formula which
can be confined in a strait jacket but it has been used to
mean such clear and effective possession of a person, even
if he is a trespasser, who gets the right under the criminal
law to &fend his property against attack even by the true
owner. Similarly an occupation of the property by a person
as an agent or a servant at the instance of the owner will
not amount to actual physical possession. Thus in our
opinion the nature of possession in such cases which may
entitle a trespasser
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308
to exercise the right of private defence of property and
person should contain the following attributes:
(i)that the trespasser must be in actual
physical possession of property over a
sufficiently long period;
(ii)that the possession must be to the
knowledge either express or implied of the
owner or without any attempt at concealment
and which contains an element of animus
prossendie. The nature of possession of the
trespasser would however be a matter to be
decided on facts and circumstances of each
case ;
(iii)the process of dispossession of the true
owner by the trespasser must be complete and
final and must be acquiesced in by the true
owner; and’
(iv)that one of the usual tests to determine
the quality of settled possession, in the case
of culturable land, would be whether or not
the trespasser, after having taken possession,
had grown any crop. If the crop had been
grown by the trespasser, then even the true
owner has no right to destroy the crop grown
by the trespasser and take forcible
possession, in which case the trespasser will
have a right of private defence and the true
owner will have no right of private defence.
These principles logically flow from a long catena of cases
decided by this Court as well as other High Courts some of
which have been referred to in the judgment of this Court in
Munshi Ram’s case (supra).
In the case of Horam and others v. Rex(1) which was relied
upon by this Court in Munshi Ram’s case (supra) a Division
Bench of the Allahabad High Court observed as follows:
"Where a trespasser enters upon the land of
another, the person in whom the right of
possession is vested, while the trespasser is
in the process of acquiring possession, may
turn the trespasser out of the land by force
and if in doing so he inflicts such injuries
on the trespasser as are warranted by the
situation, he commits no offence. His action
would be covered by the principle of self-
defence embodied in Ss. 96 to 105, Penal Code.
If, on the other hand, the trespasser had
already accomplished or completed his pos-
session and the person with the right of
possession has acquiesced in this
accomplishment, it is not open to the latter
to avail himself of the doctrine of self-
defence and by inflicting injuries on the
trespasser to reacquire possession of his
land."
It may be noted that in this case the accused had remained
in possession for ten days and had sown the field and this
was held to be sufficient possession to enable the
trespasser to resist the entry of the true owner, In fact
this case appears to be on all fours with
(1)A.I. R. 1949 All. 564,567.
309
the facts of the present case where also the appellants
party after having taken possession of the land in dispute a
month before the occurrence had grown wheat crop on it and
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the complainant party tried to re-enter the land and destroy
the crop grown by the accused.
Another decision to which reference has been made by this
Court in Munshi Ram’s case (supra) is Sangappa and other v.
State(1), where a Division Bench of the Hyderabad High Court
observed as follows:
"If somebody enters on his land during his
absence and he does not acquiesce in the.
trespass, he would still retain possession of
the land and as the possessor of the land, he
is entitled to that
possession....................................
If a person acquiesces in his dispossession
and subsequently under claim of title comes
again to dispossess his opponents then he and
his friends ’would be members of unlawful as-
sembly."
This case also fully covers the facts of the present case
which falls under the second category laid down by the
Court.
A similar view was taken in In re. Mooka Nadar and others
where Horwill, J., observed as follows :
"It seems to be true that the party of P.W.2
were on the field first on the morning on
which this offence happened; but that does not
necessarily mean that they were then in
possession of the field. A person does not
lose possession of the field by going home to
have a meal, or to sleep. If somebody enters
on his land during his absence and he does not
acquiesce in the trespass, he would still
retain possession of the land; and as the
possessor of the land he is entitled to defend
that possession............... If a person
acquiesces in his dispossession and
subsequently under claim of title comes again
to dispossess his opponents, then he and his
friends would be members of an unlawful
assembly and guilty of rioting."
These were the cases referred to in the judgment of this
Court in Munshi Ram’s case (supra) and it would appear from
all these cases that the case of the appellants is fully
covered by these decisions. Apart from that in the case of
Hazara Singh and others v. The State(3) it was held that the
accused was protected by the right of private defence having
cultivated and sown Bajra in the field. In this connection,
Chopra, J., observed as follows:
"When once Resham Singh had taken possession
of, cultivated and sown bajra in the field and
had remained
(1) I.L.R. ((1955) 14yd. 406.
(2) A.I.R.943) Mad. 590.
(3) A.I.R. (1959) Punjab 570.
310
in possession of it for a couple of months,
Hazara Singh even though he was the owner was
not entitled to take the law into his own
hands and use force in ousting the trespasser.
He had ample time to have recourse to the
protection of public authorities. He was
himself liable for committing criminal
trespass and mischief by taking forcible
possession of the land and uprooting the crop
and would. not therefore be entitled to the
right of private defence of property."
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The learned Judge relied on two judgments one of the
Allahabad High Court in Bhariu v. State(1) and the other of
Lahore High Court in Phula Singh v. Emperor(2).
In view of these decisions it is, therefore, manifest that
the finding of the High Court on the facts of the present
case that the appellants were not in settled possession of
the land is legally erroneous and cannot be allowed to
stand. The ratio of the judgment of this Court in Munshi
Ram’s case (supra) has not been correctly applied by the
High Court.
The second point that falls for determination is as to what
is the extent of right of private defence which the accused
can claim in this case? In this connection, the High Court
has given a finding that since the prosecution party had
entered the land in possession of the accused and were
trying to plough it, the appellants should have taken
recourse to the public authorities instead of indulging in
free fight with the prosecution. In other words, the High
Court found that the right of private defence available to
the accused was under the limitations provided for in Ss. 99
to 102 of the Indian Penal Code and these limitations apply
to the facts of the present case, and the accused cannot
claim any right of private defence. With respect we find
ourselves unable to agree with this somewhat broad statement
of the law. It is true that the right of private defence of
person or property is to be exercised tinder the following
limitations:
(i)that if there is sufficient time for
recourse to the public authorities the right
is not available;
(ii)that more harm than necessary should not
be caused;
(iii)that there must be a reasonable
apprehension of
death orof grievous hurt to the person or
damage to the property concerned.
The first limitation obviously does not apply to this case.
In the first place the accused after having dispossessed the
complainant to his knowledge were in conscious and peaceful
possession of the land and bad grown wheat crop therein.
The complainant had already filed a complaint and thereafter
it was not open to the
(1) A.I.R. 1954 All. 35=1954 Cr. L.J. 54.
(2) A.I.R. 1927 Lah. 705=28 Cr. L.J. 848.
311
complainant to take the law in his own hands and to try to
disposses the accused by show of force. That the
complainant had entered the land in question along with
other persons variously armed with gandasis and a gun cannot
be disputed, because this is the finding of the Court which
is supported by the injuries on the person of Mohan Singh
and Bohar Singh for which the prosecution has given no
explanation whatsoever. It is not the law that a person
when called upon to face an assaultmust run away to the
police station and not protect himself or when his property
has been the subject-matter of trespass and mischief he
should allow the aggressor to take possession of the
property while he should run to the public authorities.
Where there is an attribute of invasion or aggression on the
property by a person who has no right to possession, then
there is obviously no room to have recourse to the public
authorities and the accused has the undoubted right to
resist the attack and use even force if necessary. The
right of private defence of property or person, where there
is real apprehension that the aggressor might cause death or
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grievous hurt to the victim, could extend to the causing of
death also, and it is not necessary that death or grievous
hurt should actually be caused before the right could be
exercised. A mere reasonable apprehension is enough to put
the right of private defence into operation. We are
fortified in this view by the decision of this Court in Jai
Dev v. The State of Punjab(1) where this Court observed as
follows:
"This, however, does not mean that a person
suddenly called upon to face an assault must
run away and thus protect himself. He is
entitled to resist the attack and defend
himself. The same is the position if he has
to meet an attack on his property. In other
words, where an individual citizen or his
property is faced with a danger and immediate
aid from the State machinery is not readily
available, the individual citizen is entitled
to protect himself and his
property..................
There can be no doubt that in judging the
conduct of a person who proves that he had a
right of private defence, allowance has
necessarily to be made for his feelings at the
relevant time. He is faced with an assault
which causes a reasonable apprehension of
death or grievous hurt and that inevitably
creates in his mind some excitement and
confusion. At such a moment, the uppermost
feeling in his mind would be to ward off the
danger and to save himself or his property,
and so, he would naturally be anxious to
strike a decisive blow in exercise of his
right."
In this very case, while adverting to the question as to
whether the force used should not be more than what is
necessary, the Court observed:
"But in dealing with the question as to
whether more force is used than is necessary
or than was justified by the
(1) [1963] 3 S.C.R. 489.
10 SC/75 21
312
prevailing circumstances, it would be
inappropriate to adopt tests of detached
objectivity which would be so natural in a
court room, for instance, long after
the incident has taken place. That is why in
some judicial decisions it has been observed
that the means which a threatened person
adopts of the force which he uses should not
be weighed in golden scales."
To the same effect is the decision of this
Court in Amjad Khan v. The State(1) where
it was observed :
"It was impossible for him to know whether his
shop would or would not suffer the same fate
if he waited, and on the findings it was
reasonable for him to apprehend death or
grievous hurt to himself and his family once
they broke in, for he would then have had the
right to protest and indeed would have been
bound to do what he could to protect his
family. The threat to break in was implicit
in the conduct of the mob and with it the
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threat to kill or cause grievous hurt to the
inmates;.................. The circumstances
in which be was placed were amply sufficient
to give him a right of private defence of the
body even to the extent of causing death.
These things cannot be weighed in too fine a
set of scales or, as some learned Judges have
expressed it, in golden scales."
Thus the question whether the appellants used more force
than was necessary would determine on the facts and
circumstances of this case. We are satisfied that in the
present case it cannot be said that the appellants, although
two persons have lost their lives, had exceeded the right of
their private defence. To begin with the appellants were
undoubtedly in possession of the land and had grown wheat
crop and that the prosecution party had tried to destroy the
wheat crop. The appellants were, therefore, entitled to
resist the invasion to their right by the prosecution party.
The High Court has also found that the probabilities are
that the prosecution party were also armed with gun and
Gandasis. Mohan Singh one of the persons on the side of the
accused had received a gun-shot injury which has been proved
by the Injury Report (Ext.. P.D.) which shows that Mohan
Singh received as many as four injuries one of them under
the right eye. Similarly the accused Behar Singh who was
examined by P.W. 5 Dr. Pritpal Singh, had two injuries which
according to the Doctor were gun-shot injuries having been
caused by a gun. This Doctor also says that after examining
the injuries of Mohan Singh he was of the opinion that they
were also gun-shot injuries. The Sub-Inspector of Police
also found pellets at the place of occurrence which confirms
the fact that the complainant must have fired from his gun.
The High Court has also pointed out that the complainant
Dilbagh Singh was prosecuted for having been in possession
of an unlicensed gun and has since been absconding. These
facts, therefore, clearly establish that the prosecution
party was undoubtedly armed with lethal weapons
and that a gun was also
(1) [1952] S.C.R. 567.
313
fired. The High Court has also found that the prosecution
partly was the aggressor in the sense that they were bent
upon destroying the crop of the appellants and taking back
possession of the land forcibly. This is also supported by
the fact that the injuries on the person of the accused have
not been explained by the prosecution and in fact Mohan
Singh was deliberately kept back from being made an accused
so that the prosecution may be absolved from the duty to
explain the injuries on him.
In State of Gujarat v. Sai Fatima & Anr.(1) one of us
(Untwalia, J.,) speaking for the Court, observed as follows:
"In a situation like this when the prosecution
fails to explain the injuries on the person of
an accused, depending on the facts of each
case, any of the three results may follows:
(1) That the accused bad inflicted the
injuries on the members of the prosecution
party in exercise-of the right of self
defence.
(2) It makes the prosecution version of the
occurrence doubtful and the charge against the
accused cannot be held to have been proved
beyond reasonable doubt.
(3) It does not affect the prosecution case
at all."
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The facts of the present case clearly fall within the four
corners of either of the first two principles laid down by
this judgment. In the instant case, either the accused were
fully justified in causing the death of the deceased and
were protected by the right of private defence or that if
the prosecution does not explain the injuries on the person
of the deceased the entire prosecution case is doubtful and
the genesis of the occurrence is shrouded in deep mystery,
which is sufficient to demolish the entire prosecution case.
It was, however, contended by counsel appearing for the
State that on the allegations made by the prosecution the
accused bad mercilessly assaulted the prosecution party
including the Sulakhan Singh and Baj Singh and, therefore,
even if they bad the right of private defence they bad
exceeded the same. We are, however, unable to accept this
contention. In the first place as the prosecution has
deliberately suppressed the very material part of the origin
of occurrence, we do not know as to how the occurrence
started. Secondly when two persons on the side of the
accused were injured by gun-fire it was not possible for the
appellants to weigh their blows in golden scales in order to
assault the prosecution party. As held by us this was a
case where the appellants were fully entitled to the
exercise of the right of self defence of their property and
(1) [1975] 3 S.C.R. 993.
314
person both because their persons had been attacked and
their property had been trespassed upon and damaged. It is
manifest that after the two persons on the side of the
accused received gun-shot injuries as found by the High
Court and by us, the accused party would have undoubtedly a
reasonable apprehension that either death. grievous hurt
could be caused to the appellants or one of them. This
being the position they were fully justified in causing the
death. the deceased persons in the exercise of their right
of private defence of person. Such an apprehension could
not be said to be hypersensitive or based on no ground and
it will be idle to contend that accused should have waited
until one of their party members would have died or received
serious injuries before acting on the spurt of moment, nor
can one expect a person who is attacked by an aggressor to
modulate his blows in accordance with the injuries the
receives. In these circumstances, therefore, it cannot be
said that the accused had in any event exceeded their right
of private defence. If the prosecution did not come out
with the true version the nature and _origin of the
occurrence, they cannot blame the Court if the entire
version presented by them is rejected, as held in the recent
judgment of this Court in State of Gujarat v. Sai Fatima &
Anr.(1) For these reason therefore we are clearly of the
opinion that the accused are protected by the right of
private defence of their property and person and the
prosecution case against the appellants must fail. In any
event, the prosecution case has not been proved beyond
reasonable doubt.
The appeal is, therefore, allowed, the conviction of and the
sentences passed on the appellants are set aside and the
appellants are directed to be set at liberty forthwith.
P.B.R. Appeal allowed..
(1) [1975] 3 S.C.R. 993.
315