Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 972 of 2004
PETITIONER:
SEEMAN @ VEERANAM
RESPONDENT:
STATE, BY INSPECTOR OF POLICE
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 12/05/2005
BENCH:
P. VENKATARAMA REDDI & P.P. NAOLEKAR
JUDGMENT:
JUDGEMENT
P.P.NAOLEKAR, J.
Three accused persons viz., Seeman, Neelagiri and
Leelavathi, were tried for committing murder of one Murugan,
under Section 302 IPC. Accused \026 appellant no.1 was convicted
and sentenced to undergo life imprisonment by the Sessions
Court. The other two accused persons were acquitted. The said
conviction and sentence, having been confirmed by the High
Court, the appellant challenged the same before this Court by
filing this appeal. The prosecution case, in short is that the
deceased Murugan was the resident of Village Chithakkur.
Three years prior to the occurrence, deceased Murugan and a girl
named Kani fell in love and eloped from the Village. They were
brought back by the villagers. After some time, Kani was
married to some other person and deceased Murugan also got
married to some other girl of a nearby village. On account of
this incident, the accused persons had grudge to grind against
the deceased, having brought bad name to the family and were
awaiting an opportunity to take revenge. The deceased was
advised by the well-wishers to leave the Village and settle down
at some other place. He settled at Village Kariappati. On the
day of the incidence, i.e., 26.1.92 deceased came to Chithakkur
in search of his grandmother. At the Village, he was informed
that his grandmother has left the Village and has gone to a place
Thirukkani to collect her pension. The information was given to
him by PW2 \026 Raja @ Perumal. Thereafter, the deceased along
with Raja @ Perumal proceeded towards the bus stand so that
the deceased could catch a bus. At the bus stop when the
deceased along with PW-2 were awaiting for a bus, they saw
accused no.2 at the bus stop who stared at the deceased.
Apprehending that some untoward incident may happen, he was
advised to go to the residence of PW-1-Danam @
Balasubramanian. In the meanwhile the bus came and stopped at
some distance from the place where they were standing and the
deceased rushed towards the bus. At that time accused no.3
holding broom in her hand accosted the deceased as to why he
was running and asked him to stop. Suddenly, accused no.1
appeared at the bus stop and attacked the deceased with patta
knife and inflicted number of injuries. The deceased fell down
on the spot and succumbed to his injuries. PW1 lodged the FIR
immediately after the incident claiming that he himself, one
Jayaraj and Raja witnessed the incident. The postmortem on the
dead body was conducted by PW-7 - Dr. Edwin Joe who found
the following injuries on the person of the deceased.
1. Transverse cut injury and sides of neck
21 cms. Length x 5 cms. X 9 cms., the right end
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is 8 cms. Below and front of right ear, the left
end is 7 cms. below and back of the left ear and
0.5 cm. below chin. The wound is found to have
cut the underlying muscles, wind pipe between
thyroid and hyoid bone, food pipe, the left
carotid artery and jugular veins on both sides
and cutting the 4th cervical vertebrae 4 x 0.5 x 2
cms. and the underlying cord partially. The
edges are clear cut.
2. An oblique skin deep incised wound 6
cms. length lateral aspect of middle of right arm.
3. A vertically oblique cut wound left
fronto-parietal region 5 x 1 cm. cutting the
underlying bone 10 cms. above left earlobe.
4. A flapping cut injury 4 x 3 x 2 cms.
(muscle deep) on the right posterior occipital
region with a skin flap hanging downwards 3
cms. lateral to the midline.
5. Scratch abrasion 3 cms. length top of
right shoulder.
6. Abrasion 1 x 0.5 cm. and 0.5 x 0.5 cm.
inferior angle of right scapula.
The Sessions Court convicted Appellant No.1 relying on
the statement of PW1 and PW2 and drew corroboration to their
testimony from medical evidence. The other two accused were
acquitted giving benefit of doubt. The High Court has only
relied upon the statement of PW2 as an eye-witness and found
corroboration to his statement from the medical evidence. The
evidence of PW1 was relied upon only for the purposes of
setting the law into motion by lodging an FIR.
The learned counsel for the appellant has challenged the
conviction of A-1 contending that:
(i) the statement of PW1 being the sole eye-witness, cannot be
relied upon for convicting the accused, particularly when he is
the close relative of the deceased and when the independent
evidence was available with the prosecution; (ii) the presence of
PW2 at the place of incident itself is doubtful. In fact it was the
brother of PW2, Raja who was named as an eye-witness in the
FIR and not PW-2 Raja @ Perumal. Apart from this PW2’s
statement in regard to other acquitted accused having been
discarded by the Court, the statement, as regards the accused
appellant, does not inspire confidence and (iii) it is further urged
that the statement of PW-2 is not fully supported by medical
evidence. The injury which has been attributed to have been
caused by the appellant on the back of the deceased, was not
found in the postmortem report. All these infirmities
individually and cumulatively create a doubt as to whether PW1
was at all an eye-witness as claimed by the prosecution and the
conviction cannot be based on the testimony of sole witness.
It is now well settled that the evidence of witness cannot
be discarded merely on the ground that he is a related witness or
the sole witness, or both, if otherwise the same is found credible.
The witness could be a relative but that does not mean to reject
his statement in totality. In such a case, it is the paramount duty
of the court to be more careful in the matter of scrutiny of
evidence of the interested witness, and if, on such scrutiny it is
found that the evidence on record of such interested sole witness
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is worth credence, the same would not be discarded merely on
the ground that the witness is an interested witness. Caution is
to be applied by the court while scrutinizing the evidence of the
interested sole witness. The prosecution’s non-production of
one independent witness who has been named in the FIR by
itself cannot be taken to be a circumstance to discredit the
evidence of the interested witness and disbelieve the prosecution
case. It is well settled that it is the quality of the evidence and
not the quantity of the evidence which is required to be judged
by the court to place credence on the statement.
The FIR was lodged by PW-1 in the present case who
was not found to be an eye-witness by the High Court.
Admittedly, FIR does not name Raja @ Perumal as an eye-
witness. The FIR contains the name of Raja as an eye-witness.
It has also come in evidence that the name of the elder brother of
PW2 is also Raja and on this basis it is urged that it is this Raja
who is the elder brother of PW-2, that has witnessed the
occurrence but he was not examined by the prosecution.
Therefore, the statement of PW-2 could not have been relied
upon by the Court. From the evidence of Investigating Officer it
reveals that immediately after the incident, I.O. reached the spot
and prepared the inquest report \026 Exb.P13. The name of Raja @
Perumal is written in column no.3 as a witness which shows that
immediately after the incident Raja @ Perumal has been referred
as an eye-witness. During the course of investigation, the police
also recorded the statement of Raja @ Perumal and not that of
Raja who is the elder brother of PW-2. Upon careful reading of
the statement of PW-2 it appears to us that he was present at the
spot when the incident took place. It has come in his evidence
that he has accompanied Murugan, the deceased from his place
to the bus stop whereas the elder brother has left the house for
his tuitions. We have no manner of doubt that it is PW-2 who
has witnessed the occurrence. Accused nos. 2 and 3 were
acquitted not because the statement of PW-2 was not relied upon
but they were given benefit of doubt as their alleged acts were
not mentioned in the FIR by PW-1. Apart from this, PW-2’s
statement that A-2 came to the bus stop and stared at the
deceased and A-3 holding broom in her hand questioned him as
to why he was running and asked him to stop when he was
rushing towards the bus in no manner implicate those accused
persons in commission of crime. The statement even if relied
upon does not indicate that they instigated the accused-appellant
to attack the deceased or to commit a crime. In the circumstance,
discarding that portion of the evidence does not in any manner
affect the veracity of the evidence of this witness as regards the
accused appellant.
PW-2 while describing the incident, has deposed that A-
1-appellant Seeman had inflicted injury on the neck of the
deceased by patta knife and, thereafter caused cut on the right
side of his head and further inflicted cut on the neck and that he
has also inflicted injuries on the back. It is submitted by the
learned counsel that no injury was found on the back of the
deceased and, therefore, the medical evidence does not
corroborate the statement of PW-2. It is to be noticed that the
duration of the occurrence was short. The injuries on the
deceased were inflicted with quick succession and it is too much
to expect from a witness in such circumstance to narrate the
exact injuries caused on a person of the deceased. The
genaralised statement as regards the injuries would be more
credible than the particularized statement of location of injuries
on the body when the injuries were caused in quick succession
and in short time. Moreover, there is every possibility of the
first injury being caused from the back side of the deceased. On
scrutiny of the evidence of PW-2 and the medical evidence we
are of the opinion that medical evidence corroborates the
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statement of eye-witness, PW-2. Both, the sessions court and the
High Court, after scrutiny of the evidence of PW-2 has relied
upon the statement and we do not find discernible discrepancy in
the evidence of PW-2 not to place reliance on his evidence. For
the aforesaid reasons, the appeal fails and is dismissed.