Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SUBASH SHIV SHANKAR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF U.P.
DATE OF JUDGMENT14/04/1987
BENCH:
NATRAJAN, S. (J)
BENCH:
NATRAJAN, S. (J)
DUTT, M.M. (J)
CITATION:
1987 AIR 1222 1987 SCR (2) 962
1987 SCC (3) 331 1987 SCALE (1)838
ACT:
Indian Penal Code, 1860--Sections 34 and 302--Joint
attack by accused--Some accused acquitted for want of ac-
ceptable proof of identity--Other accused cannot escape
conviction when participation in attack established by
prosecution.
Criminal Trial--Identification Parade--Delay in holding
of-First Information Report and statements of
witnesses--Absence of descriptive particulars of
accused----Conviction----Whether vitiated.
HEADNOTE:
The prosecution alleged that there was a dispute between
the appellant in Appeal No. 287 of 1978 and the deceased in
regard to payment of repair charges for a machine part and
that three or four days later this appellant alongwith
others attacked the deceased when he was accompanied by P.W.
1 and P.W. 2. It was further alleged that while the appel-
lant in Appeal No. 288 of 1978 caught hold of the deceased,
the appellant in the first appeal and two others repeatedly
stabbed him with knives and caused several injuries. P.W. 2
was also injured when he tried to intercede. The deceased
and P.W. 2 were taken to hospital where the deceased was
pronounced dead. P.W. 1 presented a complaint at the Police
Station.
The appellant in the first appeal absconded and surren-
dered before the court later. On questioning, he named the
assailants, who were arrested on different dates. Test
indentification parades were held for two accused persons
wherein the appellant in the second appeal was identified by
three witnesses, but the other accused was identified by
only of them. In the subsequent identification parade held
for another accused, none of the witnesses was able to
identify him. All the accused were tried and the two appel-
lants and another accused were convicted under Section 302
read with Section 34 Indian Penal Code and Section 324 read
with Section 34 Indian Penal Code for having committed
murder of the deceased and caused hurt with a knife to P.W.
2 and were awarded imprisonment for life and three years’
rigorous imprisonment respectively, the sentences to run
concurrently. The fourth accused who was not identified by
any one of the witnesses at the identification
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963
parade and whose name was not mentioned in the First Infor-
mation Report, was acquitted. The High Court in appeal
confirmed the conviction of the two appellants but acquitted
the third accused on the ground that he had been identified
by only P.W. 2 and not by other witnesses.
In the appeal to this Court, it was submitted on behalf
of the appellant in Criminal Appeal No. 287 of 1978 that the
prosecution evidence suffers from numerous infirmities and
as such, the trial court and the High Court ought not to
have convicted him, that in any case the benefit of doubt
given to the two of the other accused ought to have been
given to him, that there was an attempt to cover up the
delay in making the report, that the motive put forward for
the occurrence was of a flimsy nature and it was unbelieva-
ble that for non-payment of repair charges the deceased
would have been attacked alongwith his companions, that P.W.
1 did not have proper eye sight, that P.W. 3 was a chance
witness and that C.W. 1 failed to support the prosecution
case, and that even though P.W. 2 was an injured witness,
there was no guarantee that his evidence is truthful. It was
further urged that the appellant could be convicted only for
an offence under Section 324 Indian Penal Code for the
injury caused to the deceased as well as P.W. 2, that as the
sub-stratum of the prosecution fails, the entire case had to
fail and that when the other accused persons were acquitted,
the appellant alone cannot be convicted under Section 302
read with Section 34 I.P.C., in the absence of evidence that
he caused any of the fatal injuries on the deceased.
It was submitted on behalf of the appellant in Criminal
Appeal No. 288 of 1978 that neither his name nor any of his
characteristics were mentioned in the First Information
Report by any of the eye witnesses, that he was falsely
implicated, that there was no motive for him to murder the
deceased, that one of the prosecution witnesses had alto-
gether denied his presence, that there was delay in his
arrest and ho1ding of the identification parade and he was
exposed to the identifying witnesses by not covering his
distinctive features, that the prosecution had failed to
prove beyond reasonable doubt his participation in the
commission of the occurrence and that when the other ac-
cused, one of whose name figured in the First Information
Report, were acquitted by giving the benefit of doubt. he
should also have been given the same benefit of doubt.
Dismissing the appeal of the appellant in Appeal No. 287
of 1978 and allowing the appeal of the appellant in Appeal
No. 288 of 1978, this Court,
964
HELD: 1. When participation of the appellant with the
other assailants is established beyond reasonable doubt by
the prosecution, he cannot escape the consequences of the
attack committed by him and his accomplices in furtherance
of their common intention and conviction under Section 302
read with Section 34 Indian Panel Code even though the other
accused stand acquitted and even though there may be no
evidence that the accused caused one of the fatal injuries.
[973E]
2. The other accused were acquitted only for want of
acceptable proof of their identity and not because the eye
witnesses had not seen the occurrence or that the occurrence
had taken place in a different manner. Therefore, there is
no merit in the contention that when the other accused
persons were acquitted, the appellant in Criminal Appeal
No.287 of 1978 alone cannot be convicted under Section 302
read with Section 34 Indian Penal Code, in the absence of
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evidence to show that he caused any of the fatal injuries on
the deceased. The appellant, therefore, cannot escape the
consequences of the attack jointly committed by him and his
accomplices in furtherance of the common intention. [972B-E]
3. There is nothing improbable in the appellant having
nurtured a grievance against the deceased and wanting to
settle scores with him. The evidence of the eye witnesses
was clearly to the effect that the appellant told his com-
panions on seeing the deceased that he was the person who
had quarreled with him and taken away the machine part
without paying the repair charges. Making common cause of
his grievance, the appellant’s companions had also joined
him in perpetrating an attack on the deceased. The trial
court and the High Court were right in accepting the evi-
dence of these witnesses. [970F-G]
4. There is no merit in the contention that the appel-
lant can be convicted only for an offence under Section 324
Indian Penal Code for injury caused to the deceased as well
as P.W. 2. The trial court had framed a separate charge
against the appellant under Section 324 Indian Penal Code in
addition to the charge under Section 324 read with Section
34 Indian Penal Code. There is also no merit in the conten-
tion that when the sub-stratum of the prosecution case
fails, the entire case has to fail. The prosecution version
fully survives in spite of the acquittal of the other ac-
cused for want of proof of identity. [971 D-F]
5. Where there is delay in holding an identification
parade, it would not be safe to place reliance on the iden-
tification of the accused by the eye witnesses. [969D-E]
965
6. Where the witnesses had not given any description of
the accused in the First Information Report or in the state-
ments during the investigation, their identification of the
accused at the trial cannot be safely accepted by the court
for convicting the accused. [969E]
7. The appellant in Criminal Appeal No. 288 of 1978 was
not arrested for nearly nine weeks after coming to know of
his name and address from the other appellant. It was not
the case of the prosecution that the appellant was abscond-
ing. Apart from this infirmity, the appellant was not put up
for test identification parade promptly and it was held
three weeks after his arrest and no explanation was offered
for the delay in holding it. There is, therefore, room for
doubt as to whether the delay in holding the identification
parade was in order to enable the identifying witnesses to
see him in the police lock up or in the jail premises and
make a note of his features. A sufficiently long interval of
time had elapsed between the date of occurrence when the
witnesses had seen the appellant for a few minutes and the
date of the identification parade. [968D-H; 969A]
8. Although all the three witnesses had identified the
appellant at the identification parade, after nearly four
months, in the absence of any descriptive particulars of the
appellant in the First Information Report or in the state-
ments of witnesses during the investigation, it would not be
safe and proper to act upon the identification of the appel-
lant by the three witnesses at the identification parade and
hold that he was one of the assailants of the deceased.
[969A-D]
9. As the conviction of the appellant was based solely
with reference to his identification at the parade, he has
to be given the benefit of doubt and acquitted. [973E]
Muthu Swami v. State of Madras, AIR 1954 SC 4; Mohd.
Abdul Hafeez v. State of Andhra Pradesh, AIR 1983 SC 361;
Gurdev Singh and others v. The State, 1963 Punjab Law Re-
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porter, 409; State of U.P. v. Hari Prasad, AIR 1974 SC 1740;
Ugar Ahir v. State of Bihar, AIR 1965 SC 277; Vijay Kumar v:
State of J & K, AIR 1982 SC 1022; and Amir Hussain v. State
of U.P., AIR 1975 SC 2211, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal Nos.
287-288 of 1978.
From the Judgment and Order dated 14.10.1977 of the
Allahabad High Court in Criminal Appeal Case No. 2242 of
1972.
966
Frank Anthony, Sushil Kumar and J.K. Das for the Appel-
lant in Crl. A.No. 287 of 1978.
U.R. Lalit, S.K. Bisaria and A.D. Malhotra for the
Appellant in Crl. A.No. 288 of 1978.
Prithvi Raj, C.P. Mittal and Dalveer Bhandari for the Re-
spondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
NATARAJAN, J. These Appeals by Special Leave arise out
of a common judgment rendered by the Allahabad High Court in
three Criminal Appeals filed before it by the appellants and
one Raj Kishore. Appellant Subash and appellant Shiv Shankar
were convicted alongwith Raj Kishore by the 4th Additional
Sessions Judge, Bareilly under Section 302 read with Section
34 Indian Penal Code and Section 324 read with Section 34
Indian Penal Code respectively for having committed the
murder of one Ram Babu and for having caused hurt with a
knife to witness Dinesh Shankar. For the said convictions
they were awarded imprisonment for life and three year’s
R.I., respectively and the sentences were ordered to run
concurrently. One Om Kumar who was also sent up for Sessions
trial under the two charges mentioned above was acquitted by
the Sessions Judge. The three convicted persons preferred
appeals to the High Court and the High Court has confirmed
the convictions and sentences awarded to Subash and Shiv
Shankar but acquitted Raj Kishore.
The offences in question were committed on March 12,
1971 i.e., a day after Holi Festival at about 11 a.m. on the
Bareilly-Nainital Road in Bareilly. The prosecution case was
that while Shiv Shankar caught hold of Ram Babu, Subash, Raj
Kishore and Om Kumar repeatedly stabbed him with knives and
caused fatal injuries to him. When Dinesh Shankar (P.W. 2)
tried to intercede he was also stabbed by Subash and caused
an injury. Besides, Dinesh Shankar (P.W. 2) the occurrence
was witnessed by an uncle of Ram Babu viz. Budh Sen (P.W. 1)
and Shyam Behari (P.W. 3) and some others. Ram Babu and
Dinesh Shankar were taken to the hospital but Ram Babu was
pronounced dead in the hospital. The motive for the occur-
rence was that about 15 or 20 days prior to the occurrence
Ram Babu had given a machine part to Subash for being welded
but Subash failed to carry out the work; nevertheless he
refused to return the machine part without the repair
charges being paid to him. Ram Babu refused to pay the
charges and there was an altercation but the parties were
pacified by
967
Dinesh Shankar and Ram Babu took away the machine part
without paying any charges to Subash. The quarrel had taken
place about 3 or 4 days before the occurrence. Bearing this
grudge in mind, when Ram Babu, accompanied by Budh Sen and
Dinesh Shankar was proceeding to Qutabkhana to witness the
Holi celebrations, Subash assisted by his three companions
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attacked Ram Babu in the manner set out earlier and caused
fatal injuries to him. There were as many as 14 injuries on
Ram Babu among which 7 were punctured wounds. Among the
punctured wounds, injury nos. 7 and 8 were deep injuries
which had injured the pleura, left lung, pericardium and the
heart. These injuries were certified to be sufficient in the
ordinary course of nature to cause death. Dinesh Shankar
(P.W. 2) also had sustained an incised wound on his left
thigh.
Budh Sen (P.W. 1) got a report Exhibit Kha 1 written by
his son and presented it at the Police Station at 1.12 p.m.
Therein he has stated that accused Subash was known to him
but the other three assailants were not known to him but
another witness Bhuvan Chand examined as C.W. 1, had in-
formed him that one Raja Ram was one of the assailants of
Ram Babu. It would appear that subsequently Bhuvan Chand
refused to testify out of fear of the accused and hence he
was not cited as a witness in the charge-sheet. Even so,
having regard to the averments in Exhibit Kha 1, the Ses-
sions Judge examined Bhuvan Chand as a court witness. He,
however, failed to corroborate Budh Sen and stated that he
did not know anything about the occurrence.
Subash was absconding and he surrendered before the
court on 12.3.71. He was subsequently questioned by the
Investigating Officer and he gave information regarding the
names and addresses of the other three assailants. Raj
Kishore was arrested on 23.5.1971 and Shiv Shankar was
arrested on 14.6.71 from the office of the Central Excise,
Bareilly where he was employed. Om Kumar surrendered himself
in Court on 15.7.71.
Test identification parades were held for Raj Kishore
and Shiv Shankar on 5.5.71 wherein Shiv Shankar was identi-
fied by Budh Sen, Dinesh Shankar and Shyam Behari but Raj
Kishore was identified only by Dinesh Shankar. In the subse-
quent test identification parade held for Om Kumar on
27.7.71 none of the witnesses was able to identify him. The
defence of all the accused was one of denial.
Since accused Om Kumar was not identified by any of the
witnesses at the test identification parade and since his
name was not
968
mentioned in Exhibit Kha 1 the Sessions Judge acquitted him
of the charges and convicted only the two appellants and Raj
Kishore. The High Court acquitted Raj Kishore because he had
been identified only by Dinesh Shankar and not by the other
witnesses but, however, confirmed the conviction of these
two appellants and it is against such confirmation by the
High Court, the appellants have preferred these Appeals.
Before dealing with the case of Subash we can conven-
iently deal with the appeal of Shiv Shankar. Admittedly he
was not known to any of the eye witnesses and his name does
not also find a place in the First Information Report Exhib-
it Kha 1. His name came to be known only through Subash when
he was questioned in the jail on 7.4.1971. Even if it were
so, it is not understandable why the Investigating Officer
should have taken three weeks to question Subash after his
surrender in Court on 17.3.1971. Be that as it may, even
after getting the name and address of Shiv Shankar from
Subash, the Investigating Officer has failed to trace him
and arrest him till 14.6.1971. Shiv Shankar was an employee
in the office of the Central Excise Department at Bareilly
itself. It is, therefore, difficult to believe that the
Investigating Officer would not have been able to trace him
and arrest him for nearly 9 weeks after coming to know of
Shiv Shankar’s name and address from Subash. As a matter of
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fact, the Investigating Officer has stated in his evidence
that he visited the house of Shiv Shankar two or three times
to arrest him but Shiv Shankar was not to be found. If Shiv
Shankar was absent from the house the Investigating Officer
could have easily learnt from the neighbours where he was
working and where he had gone and located him and arrested
him. It is not the prosecution case that Shiv Shankar was
absconding. In such circumstances it is difficult to accept
the prosecution case that the Investigating Officer could
not trace and arrest Shiv Shankar till 14.6.71 in spite of
coming to know on 7.4.71 itself that he was one of the
assailants of Ram Babu.
Apart from this infirmity we further find that Shiv
Shankar was not put up for test Identification parade
promptly. The identification parade has been held three
weeks after his arrest and no explanation has been offered
for the delay in holding the test identification parade.
There is, therefore, room for doubt as to whether the delay
in holding the identification parade was in order to enable
the identifying witnesses to see him in the police lock-up
or in the jail premises and make a note of his features.
Over and above all these things there remains the fact that
a
969
sufficiently long interval of time had elapsed between the
date of occurrence when the witnesses had seen Shiv Shankar
for a few minutes and the date of the test identification
parade. It is, no doubt, true that all the three witnesses
had correctly identified Shiv Shankar at the identification
parade but it has to be borne in mind that nearly 4 months
had elapsed during the interval. It is relevant to mention
here that neither in Exhibit Kha I nor in their statements
during investigation, the eye witnesses have given any
descriptive particulars of Shiv Shankar. While deposing
before the Sessions Judge they have stated that Shiv Shankar
was a tall person and had ’sallow’ complexion. If it is on
account of these features the witnesses were able to identi-
fy Shiv Shankar at the identification, parade, they would
have certainly mentioned about them at the earliest point of
time because their memory would have been fresh then. Thus
in the absence of any descriptive particulars of Shiv Shan-
kar in Exhibit Kha 1 or in the statements of witnesses
during investigation, it will not be safe and proper to act
upon the identification of Shiv Shankar by the three wit-
nesses at the identification parade and hold that he was one
of the assailants of Ram Babu. As pointed out in Muthu Swami
v. State of Madras, A.I.R. 1954 S.C 4 where an identifica-
tion parade is held about 2-1/2 months after the occurrence
it would not be safe to place reliance on the identification
of the accused by the eye witnesses. In another case Mohd.
Abdul Hafeez v. State of Andhra Pradesh, A.I.R. 1983 S.C.
361 it was held that where the witnesses had not given any
description of the accused in the First Information Report,
their identification of the accused at the Sessions trial
cannot be safely accepted by the court for awarding convic-
tion to the accused. In the present case there was a long
interval of nearly 4 months before the test identification
parade was held and it is difficult to accept that in spite
of this interval of time the witnesses were able to have a
clear image of the accused in their minds and identify him
correctly at the identification parade.
Mr. U.R. Lalit, learned counsel for Shiv Shankar further
contended that Shiv Shankar had certain distinctive features
like scars on the face, reddish lips etc., and these marks
of identification should have been furnished to the witness-
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es before they were called upon to identify Shiv Shankar at
the identification parade. We do not think it necessary to
go into the merits of this argument in the light of our
conclusion already reached. As the conviction of Shiv Shan-
kar is based solely with reference to his identification at
the identification parade, he has to be given the benefit of
doubt and acquitted in the light of our finding. According-
ly, Shiv Shankar’s appeal has to succeed.
970
Coming now to the appeal of Subash it was strenuously
contended by Mr. Frank Anthony, learned counsel that the
prosecution evidence suffers from numerous infirmities and
as such the Sessions Judge and the High Court ought not to
have convicted him. His further argument was that in any
case the benefit of doubt given to Om Kumar and Raj Kishore,
ought to have been given to Subash also. Mr. Anthony argued
that Exhibit Kha 1 could not have been given at 1.12 p.m.
because there is no evidence to show when the report was
sent to the Magistrate and when it was received by him. The
learned counsel referred to Gurdev Singh and others v. The
State, [1963] Punjab Law Reporter, 409 where the dangers
ensuing from a First Information Report not being lodged
promptly have been pointed out. We are unable to accept the
argument of Mr. Anthony because there are no materials to
warrant an inference that Exhibit Kha 1 had been given later
but ante-dated to cover up the delay in making the report.
It is true that the First Information Report sent to Court
does not contain the Magistrate’s endorsement regarding the
time of its receipt, but Ram Kishan, Head Constable (P.W. 5)
has deposed that the special report was despatched to the
Magistrate at 1.20 p.m. itself through constable Chiman Lal
and that the General Diary contains an entry to that effect.
It was seriously urged by Mr. Anthony that the motive
put forward for the occurrence Was of a flimsy nature and it
is unbelievable that for non-payment of repair charges
Subash would have attacked Ram Babu along with his compan-
ions. This argument has to fail because Dinesh Shankar has
clearly deposed that there was an altercation between Subash
and Ram Babu there on four days earlier and Ram Babu took
away the machine part without paying repair charges to
Subash. There is, therefore, nothing improbable in Subash
having nurtured a grievance against Ram Babu and wanting to
settle scores with him. The evidence of the eye-witnesses is
clearly to the effect that Subash told his companions on
seeing Ram Babu, that he is the person who had quarrelled
with him and taken away the machine part without paying the
repair charges. Making common cause of his grievance Su-
bash’s companions had also joined him in perpetrating an
attack on Ram Babu. The intent of Subash in launching an
attack on Ram Babu can be gauged from the fact that when
Dinesh Shankar tried to intervene, he had prevented him and
inflicted a stab injury on him also.
The further argument of Mr. Anthony was that Budh Sen
did not have proper eye sight, that Shyam Behari was a
chance witness and
971
that Bhuvan Chand named in Exhibit Kha 1 had failed to
support the prosecution case and as such there is no accept-
able evidence to convict Subash. He also stated that even
though Dinesh Shankar is an injured witness, there is no
guarantee his evidence is truthful. None of these conten-
tions in our opinion, has any merit. Budh Sen has stated
that his eye sight is poor without glasses but with specta-
cles he can see well. It is not the case of the appellant
that Budh Sen was not wearing his spectacles at the time of
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the occurrence. In so far as Dinesh Shankar and Shyam Behari
are concerned, their presence at the scene cannot admit any
doubt because their names find a place in Exhibit Kha I.
Moreover Dinesh Shankar has sustained an injury on his left
thigh. The evidence of these witnesses has been accepted by
the Session Court and the High Court and we see no reason to
take a different view. In so far as Bhuvan Chand (C.W. 1) is
concerned, the prosecution has satisfactorily explained why
he was not cited as a witness. He had no doubt furnished the
name of Raja Ram alias Raj Kishore to Budh Sen but he subse-
quently backed out fearing reprisal at the hands of the
accused. Mr. Anthony argued that even if his contentions are
not accepted, Subash can be convicted only for an offence
under Section 324 Indian Penal Code for the injury caused to
Ram Babu as well as Dinesh Shankar. We may mention here that
the Sessions Judge had framed a separate charge-against the
appellant Subash under Section 324 Indian Penal Code in
addition to the charge under Section 302 read with Section
34 Indian Penal Code. Mr. Anthony invited our attention to
State of U.P. v. Hari Prasad, A.I.R. 1974 S.C. 1740 and Ugar
Ahir v. State of Bihar, A.I.R. 1965 S.C. 277 to contend that
when the sub-stratum of the prosecution case fails, the
entire case has to fail. We find the facts in those cases
were entirely different and hence they can have no relevance
to this appeal. In the present case, the prosecution version
fully survives in spite of the acquittal of the other ac-
cused for want of proof of indentity.
The last argument of Mr. Anthony was that in any event
when the other accused persons are acquitted, Subash alone
cannot be convicted under Section 302 read with Section 34
Indian Penal Code in the absence of evidence to show that he
caused any of the fatal injuries on Ram Babu. This argument
is devoid of any merit. The case of Subash stands on a
different footing from that of the other accused because he
has been clearly named and the particulars of his profession
and address have been furnished in Exhibit Kha 1. All the
witnesses have stated that he was known to all of them. In
contrast the names of the other accused were not known to
the eye witnesses and the name of Raj Kishore alone had been
furnished to Budh Sen by Bhuvan Chand.
972
Besides attacking Ram Babu Subash had also attacked Dinesh
Shankar. He was absconding and had later surrendered himself
in court. No test identification parade was held for him
because his identity was never in doubt. He had a grudge
against Ram Babu and it was on his instigation the attack on
Ram Babu had been launched. His case, therefore, stands on a
distinctively different footing from that of the other
accused persons. Even though the other accused are acquitted
it is only for want of proof of their identity and not
because the eye witnesses had not seen the occurrence or
that the occurrence had taken place in a different manner.
Subash cannot, therefore, escape the consequences of the
attack jointly committed by him and his accomplices in
furtherance of their common intention even though the other
accused stand acquitted for want of acceptable proof of
their identity. Mr. Anthony referred us to the decision in
Vijay Kumar v. State of J & K, A.I.R. 1982 S.C. 1022 to
contend that when the other accused stand acquitted Subash
also should be acquitted of the charge under Section 302
read with Section 34 Indian Penal Code. The facts in that
case bear no comparison with the facts in this case. On the
other hand Amir Hussain v. State of U.P., A.I.R. 1975 S.C.
2211 will be the decision apt for consideration in this
case. In the above case 10 persons were acquitted by the
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Sessions Judge and three alone were convicted under Section
302 read with Section 34 Indian Penal Code. Among those
three, two were acquitted by the High Court and consequently
only one of the accused stood convicted. The said accused
appealed to this court and contended that since the other
two accused had been acquitted, he should also be acquitted
of the charge under Section 302 read with Section 34 Indian
Penal Code. Repelling the contention this Court held as
follows:-
"Much stress has been laid on behalf
of the appellant upon the fact that despite
the evidence of the above mentioned four eye-
witnesses, the High Court has acquitted Kari-
muddin and Mohd. Ibrahim accused. It is, in
our view, not necessary to express an opinion
on the point as to whether those two accused
were rightly acquitted or not. All that we can
say is that the benefit of doubt which resuit-
ed in the acquittal of the other two accused
would not vitiate the conviction of the appel-
lant in case the evidence adduced against him
is found to be satisfactory and convincing.
The material on record establishes that the
appellant had a motive to join in the assault
on Ibrahim Pradhan. The appellant held out a
threat and report about it was lodged by
Ibrahim deceased at the police station about
973
3-1/2 months prior to the present occurrence.
The evidence about the motive lends assurance
to the evidence of the eye-witnesses regarding
the complicity of the appellant.
We would, therefore, maintain the
conviction of the appellant.
As regards the sentence, it may be
stated that the only injury which is attribut-
ed to the appellant is an incised wound on the
right arm of Ibrahim. The incised wound which
was found on the scalp of Mehandi Hasan was
ascribed by the eye-witnesses to Karimuddin
who has been acquitted. In view of the fact
that a comparatively minor injury was at-
tributed to the appellant and he is being
vicariously held liable for the fatal injuries
caused by the other culprits, we consider it
to be a fit case in which we might substitute
the lesser sentence for the extreme penalty of
death. We accordingly maintain the conviction
of the appellant but reduce his sentence to
that of imprisonment for life."
We are, therefore, of the view that even though the
other accused stand acquitted and even though there is no
evidence that Subash caused one of the fatal injuries, he
cannot escape conviction under Section 302 read with Section
34 Indian Penal Code when his participation with three other
assailants in the attack on Ram Babu has been established
beyond reasonable doubt by the prosecution. We, therefore,
confirm his convictions and the sentences awarded therefor.
In the result Crl. Appeal No. 287 of 1978 will stand
dismissed while Crl. Appeal No. 288 of 1978 will stand
allowed. Appellant Subash will surrender himself to custody
failing which he should be arrested for serving out the
sentence. Appellant Shiv Shankar will stand acquitted of the
convictions under Section 302 read with Section 34 Indian
Penal Code and 324 read with Section 34 Indian Penal Code
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and his bail bonds will stand cancelled.
N.P.V. Crl. Appeal No. 287/78 dismissed.
Crl. Appeal No. 288/78 allowed.
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