Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MAHADEVA SHARMA & OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF BIHAR
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
21/04/1965
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
SARKAR, A.K.
SUBBARAO, K.
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
CITATION:
1966 AIR 302 1966 SCR (1) 18
ACT:
Criminal Law-Alternative charges under s. 302 read with s.
34 and s. 302 read with 149 of the Indian Penal Code-No
charge under s. 147 or s. 148-conviction under s. 302
read with s. 149-Legality.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant,% were charged alternatively under s. 302 read
with s. 149 and s. 302 read with s. 34 of the Indian Penal
Code, 1860. They were convicted under s. 302 read with s.
149. On the question whether the conviction was legal, when
they were not charged and convicted under s. 147 or s. 148,
HELD : It was not obligatory to charged the accused under s.
147 or S. 148 before S. 149 could be utilized against them.
[22D; 23]
For the application of s. 149 there must be an unlawful
assembly. If an offence is committed in prosecution of the
common object of that assembly or is such as the members of
the unlawful assembly know to be likely to be committed then
whoever is a member of that assembly at the time the offence
is committed, is guilty. A charge under sections 143 or 147
is not a condition precedent before section. 149 is
utilized, because. these are implied in circumstances in
which s. 1,49 is used, and must always be present when the
charge is laid for an offence like murder with the aid of s.
149. There can be proof under s. 149, of the existence of
an unlawful assembly of the common object and of the part
played by that unlawful assembly or any of its members, same
as under s. 143 or s. 147 or s. 148. There may be
additional charges under these sections to guard against
failure of the charge for an offence read, with s. 149, but
the other charges cannot be regarded as condition precedent.
[22 B-C; 23 C-D, H;24A]
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeals Nos. 209
of 1962 and 3 of 1963.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment and order dated
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August 30, 1962, of the Patna High Court in Government
Appeal No. 33 of 1959 and Cr. Appeal No. 392 of 1959
respectively.
S. P. Varma, for the appellants (in Cr. A. No. 209 of
62).
K. K. Sinha, for the appellants (in Cr. A. No. 3 of
1963).
U. P. Singh, for the respondent (in both the appeals).
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The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Hidayatullah J. In these two appeals by nine persons, who,
have been convicted under s. 302/1149, Indian Penal Code,
special. leave is limited to one question of law, namely,
whether the accused could be legally convicted under the
above sections when they were not charged and convicted
under S. 147 or s. 148 of the Indian Penal Code ? It appears
from the judgment under appeal that there was a difference
of opinion on this point in the High Court at Patna and the
appeals in the High Court were disposed of by a Full Bench
which held that charges under ss. 147 and 148 were not
necessary before conviction under s. 302, Indian Penal Code
could be made with the aid of s. 149, Indian Penal Code.
In view of the limited nature of the appeals only the
essential facts may be stated. The person who lost As life
was one Misari who was related to some of the accused
persons. In the past there were other incidents. In 1955
one Ajablal was murdered and some of the present accused
were prosecuted but were acquitted. Subsequently, one
Baldeo Sharma was murdered and some of the prosecution
witnesses in this case were charged with that offence. At
the time of the judgment under appeal (August 30, 1962) an
appeal was pending in the Patna High Court against the
conviction of the accused in that case.
The present occurrence took place on April 24, 1958. The
prosecution case is that Misari was going in the morning to
call laborers when he was attacked by the appellants with
diverse weapons. He died as a result of his injuries and a
case was registered under s. 302, Indian Penal Code. The
appellants were charged at the trial alternatively under s.
302/149 and 302 /34, Indian Penal Code. The Additional
Sessions Judge, Monahyr convicted three of the appellant,-,
on both the charges, sentencing them to imprisonment for
life on the first charge only. The remaining accused were
acquitted. Appeals by those who were convicted and by the
State Government against the acquittal of the others were
heard together and were disposed of by the common judgment
now under appeal. The appeal of the State Government was
allowed and that of the three convicted accused was
dismissed. As a result all the original accused were
convicted under s. 302/1.49, Indian Penal Code and were
sentenced to imprisonment for life. During the hearing of
the appeals a point was raised by the State counsel in the
appeal by the State that the trial was bad inasmuch as no
charge under S. 147 or s. 148 had been framed. The
Divisional Bench thinking that the point might
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only menaces the public peace or actually disturbs it. The
scheme of the Chapter may now be examined.
Section 141 defines an unlawful assembly as an assembly of
five or more persons the common object of which is inter
alia to commit an offence. There are five clauses which
describe the many kinds of common objects which render an
assembly unlawful. These clauses need not be reproduced
here for nothing turns on them in +,he present case. Here
we are concerned with the offence of murder and according to
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the charge the common object of the accused who had formed
themselves into an assembly was to commit the murder of
Misari. This common object has been held proved and there
can thus be no question that this was an unlawful assembly.
Continuing again with the scheme of the Chapter, we next see
that s. 142 says that a person is considered to be a
member of an unlawful assembly, if, being aware of facts
which render any assembly an unlawful assembly be
intentionally joins that assembly or continues in it. A
mere membership of an unlawful assembly is punishable under
S. 143. Under the next section heavier punishment is
awardable to a person who joins an unlawful assembly armed
with a deadly weapon or with anything which used as a weapon
of offence is likely to cause death. Section 145 next
provides for a similar higher punishment for a person who
joins or continues in an unlawful assembly knowing that it
has been ordered to disperse. These sections make mem-
bership as such of an unlawful assembly punishable, though
in varying degrees.
Section 146 then defines the offence of rioting. This
offence is said to be committed when the unlawful assembly
or any member thereof in prosecution of the common object of
such assembly uses force or violence. It may be noticed
here that every member of the unlawful assembly is guilty of
the offence of rioting even though be may not have himself
used force or violence. There is thus vicarious
responsibility when force or violence is used in prosecution
of the common object of the unlawful assembly. The next two
sections prescribe punishment for the offence of rioting.
Section 147 punishes simple rioting. Section 148 punishes
more severely a person who commits the offence of rioting,
armed with a deadly weapon but the section makes only a
person who is so armed liable to higher punishment. Section
149 then creates vicarious responsibility for other offenses
besides rioting. The section provides as follows :
"149. Every member of unlawful assembly
guilty of offence committed in prosecution of
common object.
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If an offence is committed by any member of an
unlawful assembly in prosecution of the common
object of that assembly, or such as the
members of that assembly knew to be likely to
be committed in prosecution of that object,
every person who, at the time of the
committing of that offence, is a member of the
same assembly, is guilty of that offence".
For the application of the section there must be an unlawful
assembly. Then if an offence is committed in prosecution of
the common object of that assembly or is such as the members
of the unlawful assembly know to be likely to be committed
then whoever is member of that assembly at the time the
offence is committed is guilty. The remaining sections do
not help in the present discussion.
This being the scheme, is it obligatory to charge a person
under s. 147 or s. 148 before s. 149 can be utilized ?
Section 149 does not state this to be a condition precedent
for its own application. No other section prescribes this
procedure. Sections 146 and 149 represent conditions under
which vicarious liability arises for the acts of others. If
force or violence is used by a member in the prosecution of
the common object of the, unlawful assembly every member of
the assembly is rendered guilty of the offence of rioting
and is punishable for that offence under s. 147. The
offence of rioting must of course, occur when members are
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charged with murder as the common object of the unlawful
assembly. Section 148 creates liability on persons armed
with de;-Idly weapons and it is a distinct offence. It need
not detain us. If a person is not charged under s. 147 it
does not mean that s. 149 cannot be used. When an offence
(such as murder) is committed in prosecution of the common
object of the unlawful assembly or the offence is one which
the members of the assembly knew to be likely to be
committed in prosecution of the common object, individual
responsibility is replaced by vicarious responsibility and
every person who is a member of the unlawful assembly at the
time of the committing of the offence becomes guilty. It is
not obligatory to charge a person under s. 143, or s. 144
when charging him with S. 147 or s. 148. Similarly, it is
not obligatory to charge a person under s. 143 or s. 147
when charging him for an offence with the aid of s. 149.
These sections are implied. It may be useful to add a
charge under s. 147 and 148 with charges under other
offenses of the Penal, Code read with s. 149. but it is not
obligatory to do so. A person may join an unlawful assembly
and be guilty under s. 143 or 147 or 148 but he may
23
cease to be its member at the time when the offence under s.
302 or some other offence is committed. He would not in
that event be liable for the other offence for S. 149 would
not apply to him. The present case is not of that kind.
The fallacy in the cases which hold that a charge under s.
147 is compulsory arises because they overlook that the
ingredients of s. 143 are implied in s. 147 and the
ingredients of s. 147 are implied when a charge under s. 149
is included. An examination of s. 141 shows that the common
object which renders an assembly unlawful may involve the
use of criminal force or show of criminal force, the
commission of mischief or criminal trespass or other
offence, or resistance to the execution of any law or of any
legal process. Offenses under ss. 143 and 147 must always
he present when the charge is laid for an offence like
murder with the aid of s. 149, but the other two charges
need not be framed -separately unless it is sought to secure
a conviction under them. It is thus that s. 143 is not used
when the charge is under S. 147 or s. 148, and s. 147 is not
used when the charge is under S. 148. Section 147 may be
dispensed with when the charge is under s. 149 read with an
offence under the Indian Penal Code.
The charges that are framed against the appellants and which
we have reproduced earlier, contain all the necessary
ingredients to bring home to each member of the unlawful
assembly the offence of murder with the aid of s. 149. The
prosecution has proved the existence of an unlawful
assembly, its common object which was murder of Misari and
the member-,hip of each of the appellants. Nothing more was
necessary. of course, if a charge bad been framed under S.
147 or 148 and that charge had failed against any of the
accused then s. 149 could not have been used against him.
The area which is common to ss. 147 and 149 is the
substratum on which different degrees of liability are built
and there cannot be a conviction with the aid of s. 149 when
there is no evidence of such substratum. It is quite a
different thing to say that to lay down this substratum one
must frame first a charge under s. 143, then a charge under
s. 147 and then a charge under s. 149. The last named
section is not dependent on the other.-, because the others
are implied in circumstances in which s. 149 is used. There
can be proof under s. 1.49 of the existence of an unlawful
assembly, of the common object and of the part -played by
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the unlawful assembly or any of its members, same as under
s. 143 or S. 147 or s. 148. There may be additional charges
under these sections to guard against failure of the charge
for an offence
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read with s. 149 but the other charges cannot be regarded as
condition precedent.
We agree with the conclusion of the Full Bench and therefore
confirm the judgment under appeal. The appeals will be dis-
missed.
Appeals dismissed.
25