Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF ORISSA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BHAGABAN BARIK
DATE OF JUDGMENT02/04/1987
BENCH:
SEN, A.P. (J)
BENCH:
SEN, A.P. (J)
ERADI, V. BALAKRISHNA (J)
CITATION:
1987 AIR 1265 1987 SCR (2) 785
1987 SCC (2) 498 JT 1987 (2) 96
1987 SCALE (1)712
ACT:
Indian Penal Code, 1860--s. 79 or 304 Part II--Strained
relations between deceased and respondent--Lathi blow in-
flicted with full force on deceased’s head causing his
death--Respondent claiming to have acted in private defence
of his property believing the deceased to be a thief--Inci-
dent took place near the house of Respondent--Whether right
of private defence available--Mistake of fact and good faith
not established--Whether s. 79 attracted or conviction under
s. 304 Part II justified.
Words and Phrases: ’Mistake of fact’ and ’good faith’-
Meaning of.
HEADNOTE:
On the date of incident when the deceased was returning from
the ’house of PW 2 after reciting Bhagbat, where some other
villagers including the respondent were also present, and
reached near the house of the respondent he was assaulted by
the respondent. On hearing a hue and cry several villagers
including PWs. 2, 3, 4 and 5 ran to the place and saw the
deceased lying on the ground in a pool of blood with a head
injury. The respondent along with his mother and wife were
tending the deceased and wiping out blood. The deceased told
the villagers that the respondent had assaulted him. The
respondent stated that during the day time his bell-metal
utensils had been stolen and he was keeping a watch for the
thief, he saw a person coming inside his premises and think-
ing him to be a thief he dealt a lathi blow but subsequently
discovered that it was the deceased. The deceased also told
his wife that he had been assaulted by the respondent. On
the basis of the evidence on record the trial court convict-
ed and sentenced the respondent under s. 304 Part Il of the
IPC.
On appeal the High Court accepted the defence plea and
held that the respondent had not committed any offence and
was protected under s. 79 of the IPC and acquitted him.
Allowing the appeal of the State,
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HELD: 1. The judgment of acquittal entered by the High
Court was apparently erroneous and has caused manifest
miscarriage of justice. It is surprising that the High Court
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should have given credence to the defence plea of mistake of
fact under s. 79 of the IPC 1860. [787E-F]
2. Under s. 79 of the IPC although an act may not be
justified by law, yet if it is done under a mistake of fact,
in the belief of good faith that it is justified by law it
will not be an offence. The question of good faith must be
considered with reference to the position of the accused and
the circumstances under which he acted. In view of s. 52 of
the IPC "good faith" requires not logical infallibility but
due care and attention. The question of good faith is always
a question of fact to be determined in accordance with the
proved facts and circumstances of each case. It may be laid
down as general rule that an alleged offender is deemed to
have acted under that state of things which he in good faith
and on reasonable grounds believed to exist when he did the
act alleged to be an offence. Section 79 is attracted where
the circumstances showed that the accused acted under a bona
fide belief that he was legally justified in doing the act
owing to ignorance of the existence of relevant facts, or
mistake as to them. [789A-E; 790A]
Rattan Lal and Dhirajlal’s Law of Crimes, 23rd edn., p.
199 and Russel on crimes, vol. 1, p. 76; 79 relied upon and
Emperor v. Jagmohan Thukral & Anr., AIR (1947) All. 99,
Dhara Singh v. Emperor, AIR (1947) Lahore 249 and Chiranji
v. State, AIR (1952) Nag. 282, distinguished.
3. But the present case was not the one where a person
being ignorant of the existence of the relevant facts or
mistaken as to them is guilty of conduct which may produce
harmful result which he never intended. There was complete
absence of good faith on the part of the respondent. Un-
doubtedly the deceased and the respondent were having
strained relations. From the dying declaration as well as
the extrajudicial confession it is apparent that the de-
ceased after the recital of Bhagbat had gone near to the
pond to take the bell-metal utensils. Apparently, the re-
spondent was waiting for an opportunity to settle the ac-
count when he struck the deceased with the lathi blow and
there was no occasion for him in the circumstances proved to
have believed that he was striking at a thief. Even if he
was a thief, that fact by itself would not justify the
respondent dealing a lathi blow on the head of the deceased.
The deceased had not effected an entry into the house nor he
was anywhere near it. It appears that the respondent
stealthily followed him and took the opportunity to settle
score by dealing him with lathi
787
with great force on a vulnerable part of the body like the
head which resulted in his death. There is no suggestion
that he wielded the lathi in the right of self defence. The
respondent, therefore, must face the consequences. Although
it cannot be said from the circumstances appearing that the
respondent had any intention to kill the deceased, he must
in the circumstances be attributed with knowledge when he
struck the deceased on the head with a lathi that it was
likely to cause his death. Therefore, the respondent is
convicted under s. 304 Part I1 of the IPC and sentenced to
undergo rigorous imprisonment for three years. [791C-G]
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 405
of 1978.
From the Judgment and Order dated 9.8.1977 of the High
Court of Orissa in Criminal Appeal No. 131 of 1975.
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Prithvi Raj and R.K. Mehta for the Appellant.
G.S. Chatterjee for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SEN, J. After hearing learned counsel for the parties,
we are satisfied that the judgment of acquittal entered by
the High Court was apparently erroneous and has caused
manifest miscarriage of justice. We are rather surprised
that the High Court should have given credence to the de-
fence plea of mistake of fact under s. 79 of the Indian
Penal Code, 1860. The evidence on record shows that the
respondent and the deceased had strained relations over
grazing of cattles. On the date of incident the deceased had
gone to the house of PW 2 for recital of Bhagbat. Some other
villagers including the respondent was also present there.
At about 10 p.m. recital of Bhagbat was over and the de-
ceased returned to the house. Some time thereafter, a hue
and cry was raised from near the house of the respondent.
Several villagers including PWs 2, 3, 4 and 5 ran to the
place. They saw the deceased lying on the ground in a pool
of blood with a head injury. The respondent along with his
mother and wife were tending the deceased and wiping out
blood. The deceased was till then in his senses and on query
by the villagers stated that the respondent had assaulted
him. On being questioned, the respondent stated that during
the daytime his bellmetal utensil had been stolen and he was
keeping a watch for the thief. He saw a person coming inside
his premises and thinking him to be a thief he dealt a lathi
blow but subsequently discovered that it was the
788
deceased. On being taken back to his house the deceased told
his wife PW 6 that he had been assaulted by the respondent
in the presence of his son and grandson PWs 8 and 7. The
Doctor PW 9 who performed the post-mortem examination found
multiple injuries on the body. On dissection he found a
depressed comminuted fracture over the right perietal bone
and a transverse fracture extending below left parietal
prominence. As per the doctor, the head injury could have
been caused by a single stroke by means of a lathi if the
stroke was dealt with great force. On this evidence, the
learned Sessions Judge very rightly and properly held the
respondent guilty of culpable homicide not amounting to
murder punishable under s. 304 Part II of the Indian Penal
Code.
According to the High Court, the dying declaration made
by the deceased as also the extra-judicial confession made
by the respondent showed that the deceased had kept the
bell-metal utensil under water in the pond. At the time of
occurrence, the deceased had been to the pond to take out
the bell-metal utensil. Admittedly, it was a dark night. The
defence plea was that the respondent had been apprehensive
of further theft of his bell-metal utensils. When he found
someone near the pond, he asked who the person was. As there
was no response, believing that person to be a thief, he
assaulted him but thereafter discovered that it was the
deceased. The High Court held that in the circumstances, the
respondent had not committed any offence and was protected
under s. 79 of the Indian Penal Code. It accepted that the
onus to establish the facts to sustain the plea of mistake
of fact under s. 79 lay on the respondent and he had to
establish his plea of reasonable probability or, in other
words, on preponderance of probability either by adducing
evidence or by cross-examining the prosecution witnesses. It
referred to some cases where different High Courts under the
facts and circumstances of the particular case appearing
extended the benefit of s. 79 of the Indian Penal Code to
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the accused where it was proved that the accused had acted
under a mistake of fact i.e. an honest and reasonable belief
in the existence of circumstances which, if proved, would
make the act for which the accused is indicted an innocent
act.
Section 79 of the Indian Penal Code provides that noth-
ing is an offence which is done by any person who is justi-
fied by law, or who by reason of mistake of fact and not by
reason of mistake of law, in good faith, believes himself to
be justified by law, in doing it. Under this section, al-
though an act may not be justified by law, yet if it is done
under a mistake of fact, in the belief in good faith that it
is justified by
789
law it will not be an offence. Such cases are not uncommon
where the Courts in the facts and circumstances of the
particular case have exonerated the accused under s. 79 on
the ground of his having acted in good faith under the
belief, owing to a mistake of fact that he was justified in
doing the act which constituted an offence. As laid down in
s. 52 of the Indian Penal Code, nothing is said to be done
or believed in good faith which is done or believed without
due care and attention. The question of good faith must be
considered with reference to the position of the accused and
the circumstances under which he acted. ’Good faith’ re-
quires not logical infallibility but due care and attention.
The question of good faith is always a question of fact to
be determined in accordance with the proved facts and cir-
cumstances of each case. ’Mistake of fact.’ as put succinct-
ly in Ratanlal and Dhirajlal’s Law of Crimes, 23rd edn, p.
199 means:
"’Mistake’ is not mere forgetfulness. It is a
slip ’made, not by design, but by mischance’.
Mistake, as the term is used in jurisprudence,
is an erroneous mental condition, conception
or conviction induced by ignorance, misappre-
hension or misunderstanding of the truth, and
resulting in
some act or omission done or suffered errone-
ously by one or both of the parties to a
transaction, but without its erroneous charac-
ter being intended or known at that time."
It may be laid down/as a general rule that an alleged of-
fender is deemed to have acted under that state of things
which he in good faith and on reasonable grounds believed to
exist when he did the act alleged to be an offence. In the
classical work Russel on Crime, vol. 1, p. 76, the concept
of mistake of fact is tersely stated thus:
"When a person is ignorant of the existence of
relevant facts, or mistaken as to them, his
conduct may produce harmful results which he
neither intended nor foresaw."
At p. 79, the law is stated in these words:
"Mistake can be admitted as a defence provided
(1) that the state of things believed to exist
would, if true, have justified the act done,
and (2) the mistake must be reasonable, and
(3) that the mistake relates to fact and not
to law."
The cases on which the High Court has relied were cases
where
790
the circumstances showed that the accused had acted under a
bona fide belief that he was legally justified in doing the
act owing to ignorance of the existence of relevant facts,
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or mistake as to them. There is no need to encumber the
judgment with many citations. We would only refer to three
illustrative cases. In Emperor v. Jagmohan Thukral & Anr.,
AIR 1947 All. 99 the accused while travelling from Saharan-
pur to Dehradun near the Mohand pass picked up the loaded
gun when he saw the eyes of an animal and fired at it which
unfortunately hit two military officers. There was nothing
to show that the accused knew that there was a military camp
or that any military exercise was going on. The question was
whether the accused was liable for having committed an
offence punishable under s. 307 of the Indian Penal Code.
The Court held that the accused was protected by s. 79
observing.
"If he mistook something else as an animal, then s. 79 Penal
Code comes to his rescue."
That was a case where the accused under a bona fide mistake
shot at an object thinking him to be an animal and the
mistake was held to be one made in good faith. In Dhara
Singh v. Emperor, AIR 1947 Lahore 249 it was held that the
accused was labouring under a mistake of fact with regard to
the identity of the persons who had surrounded his house
followed by an exchange of fire, thinking them to be his
adversaries and by reason of that mistake of fact, Explana-
tion I to s. 99 gave to him a right of private defence. This
again was a case where the accused shot and killed another
person under a mistaken belief, in good faith, that such
person had intruded his house for the purpose of killing him
and that he has a reasonable belief that he was entitled to
open fire in exercise of his supposed right of private
defence. In Chirangi v. State, AIR (1952) Nag. 282 where an
accused under a moment of delusion, considered that his own
son, to whom he was attached, was a tiger and he accordingly
assaulted him with an axe, thinking by reason of mistake of
fact that he was justified in destroying the deceased whom
he did not regard to be a human being but a dangerous ani-
mal. It was held that the accused was protected under s. 79
of the Indian Penal Code. The Court held that the poignant
case which resulted in a tragedy was due to delusion of
mind, and stated:
"It is abundantly clear that if, Chirangi had
for a single moment thought that the object of
his attack was his son, he would have desisted
forthwith. There was no reason of any kind why
he should have attacked him and, as shown,
they were mutually devoted. In short, all that
happened
791
was that the appellant in a moment of delusion
had considered that his target was a tiger and
he accodingly assailed it with his axe."
These considerations do not arise in the present case. There
was complete absence of good faith on the part of the re-
spondent. It cannot be doubted that the deceased and the
respondent were having strained relations and the respondent
knew full well that the deceased had come for the recital of
Bhagbat at the house of PW 2 which he attended along with
others. From the dying declaration as well as the extra-
judicial confession it is apparent that the deceased after
the recital of Bhagbat had gone near the pond to take the
bell-metal utensil. Apparently, the respondent was waiting
for an opportunity to settle the account when he struck the
deceased with the lathi blow and there was no occasion for
him in the circumstances proved to have believed that he was
striking at a thief. This is not a case where a person being
ignorant of the existence of the relevant facts or mistaken
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as to them is guilty of conduct which may produce harmful
result which he never intended. Even if he was a thief, that
fact by itself would not justify the respondent dealing a
lathi blow on the head of the deceased. The deceased had not
effected an entry into the house nor was he anywhere near
it. He had gone to the pond to fetch his bellmetal utensil.
It appears that the respondent stealthily followed him and
took the opportunity to settle score by dealing him with a
lathi with great force on a vulnerable part of the body like
the head which resulted in his death. There is no suggestion
that he wielded the lathi in the fight of self-defence. The
respondent therefore must face the consequences. Although it
cannot be said from the circumstances appearing that the
respondent had any intention to kill the deceased, he must
in the circumstances be attributed with knowledge when he
struck the deceased on the head with a lathi that it was
likely to cause his death. The respondent was therefore
guilty of culpable homicide not amounting to murder under s.
304 Part II of the Indian Penal Code.
We accordingly allow the appeal, set aside the judgment
and order of the High Court and convict the respondent for
having committed an offence punishable under s. 304 Part II
of the Indian Penal Code. The respondent is sentenced to
undergo rigorous imprisonment for a term of three years. The
bail bonds of the respondent shall stand cancelled and he
shall be taken into custody forthwith to serve out the
remaining part of the sentence.
A.P.J. Appeal
allowed.
792