Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 5
CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 822-825 of 2001
PETITIONER:
State of Punjab
RESPONDENT:
Sanjiv Kumar @ Sanju and Ors
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 14/06/2007
BENCH:
Dr. ARIJIT PASAYAT & B.P. SINGH
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
Dr. ARIJIT PASAYAT, J.
1. The State of Punjab is in appeal against the judgment of
Punjab and Haryana High Court. While upholding the
conviction of two accused persons, namely, Vishal and Anil
Kumar, High Court directed acquittal of the respondents. In
case of co-accused Gangadhar, conviction was altered to
Section 324 of the Indian Penal Code, 1860 (in short the \021IPC\022).
In all, 9 persons faced trial and the Trial Court had found each
to be guilty of offences punishable under Sections 302, 323
read with Section 149 IPC.
2. Seven appeals were filed by eight of accused persons. As
noted above, the High Court directed acquittal of the
respondents while disposing of the appeal of Vishal and Anil
and altered the conviction of Gangadhar.
3. The background facts in a nutshell are as follows:
The accused persons had gone for a pleasure trip to
Manali in the year 1994. They had some joint photographs.
These photographs were in possession of accused Anil Kumar
alias Babba. There was some dispute regarding the delivery of
these photographs. The complainant side wanted to have the
photographs while Babba did not want to part with those
photographs. However, on 16.6.1995, around 9/8.OO P.M. the
accused persons, namely, Sanjiv Kumar alias Sanju, Satnam
Singh alias Satta, Parminder Singh alias Khalsa, Ganga Dhar,
Vishal Sharma, Gurpreet Singh Bedi, Sanjiv Kumar and Anil
Kumar alias Babba and Amit Kumar assembled near the
S.T.D. booth of Satnam Singh alias Satta in the area of
Krishna Nagar, Hoshiarpur, Harbans Lal questioned as to
what was the problem in returning the photographs. Due to
that an altercation took place in Gali No. 14, Kamlapur and as
a result of that Sanjiv Kumar alias Sanju and Satnam Singh
alias Satta raised a lalkara that Harbans Lal and his
companions should be caught hold of and the matter should
be finished once for all. Anil Kumar alias Babba gave a Kirpan
blow on the flank of Harbans Lal and Vishal Sharma gave a
Kirpan blow on the chest of Rakesh Kumar alias Gori. Both of
them fell down on the ground. Rajinder Kumar PW.5 and Raj
Kumar alias Raju PW.6 raised an alarm. Still Ganga Dhar gave
two Kirpan blows on the left side of the forehead and right
thigh of Rajinder Kumar; Gurpreet Singh Bedi gave a hockey
blow on the left side of the ear of Rajinder Kumar. Parminder
Singh alias Khalsa and the owner of Judge S.T.D. and others
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 5
boys surrounded them and then Raju and Rajinder Kumar
raised alarm again. Upon this Anil Kumar alias Babba and his
companions ran away from the scene of occurrence. Injured
Harbans Lal succumbed to the injuries at the spot and Rakesh
Kumar in the hospital, the same day. On the basis of
information lodged, investigation was undertaken and on
completion thereof charge-sheet was filed. The trial Court
found the accused persons guilty, convicted and sentenced
them as aforesaid.
4. The High Court found that no definite role was ascribed
to the respondents, and there was no evidence on record with
regard to the sharing of common object by the respondents.
5. Learned counsel for the appellant-State submitted that
presence of acquitted respondents has been accepted both by
the Trial Court and the High Court. That being so, their
conviction under Section 149 was clearly in order and the
High Court should not have interfered with the same.
6. There is no appearance on behalf of the respondents in
spite of service of notice.
7. As noted above, the High Court noted that the
prosecution has not even remotely established applicability of
Section 149 IPC.
8. The pivotal question is applicability of Section 149 IPC.
Said provision has its foundation on constructive liability
which is the sine qua non for its operation. The emphasis is
on the common object and not on common intention. Mere
presence in an unlawful assembly cannot render a person
liable unless there was a common object and he was actuated
by that common object and that object is one of those set out
in Section 141. Where common object of an unlawful
assembly is not proved, the accused persons cannot be
convicted with the help of Section 149. The crucial question to
determine is whether the assembly consisted of five or more
persons and whether the said persons entertained one or more
of the common objects, as specified in Section 141. It cannot
be laid down as a general proposition of law that unless an
overt act is proved against a person, who is alleged to be a
member of unlawful assembly, it cannot be said that he is a
member of an assembly. The only thing required is that he
should have understood that the assembly was unlawful and
was likely to commit any of the acts which fall within the
purview of Section 141. The word \021object\022 means the purpose
or design and, in order to make it \021common\022, it must be shared
by all. In other words, the object should be common to the
persons, who compose the assembly, that is to say, they
should all be aware of it and concur in it. A common object
may be formed by express agreement after mutual
consultation, but that is by no means necessary. It may be
formed at any stage by all or a few members of the assembly
and the other members may just join and adopt it. Once
formed, it need not continue to be the same. It may be
modified or altered or abandoned at any stage. The expression
\021in prosecution of common object\022 as appearing in Section 149
have to be strictly construed as equivalent to \021in order to attain
the common object\022. It must be immediately connected with
the common object by virtue of the nature of the object. There
must be community of object and the object may exist only up
to a particular stage, and not thereafter. Members of an
unlawful assembly may have community of object up to
certain point beyond which they may differ in their objects and
the knowledge, possessed by each member of what is likely to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 5
be committed in prosecution of their common object may vary
not only according to the information at his command, but
also according to the extent to which he shares the community
of object, and as a consequence of this the effect of Section
149, IPC may be different on different members of the same
assembly.
9. \021Common object\022 is different from a \021common intention\022
as it does not require a prior concert and a common meeting
of minds before the attack. It is enough if each has the same
object in view and their number is five or more and that they
act as an assembly to achieve that object. The \021common object\022
of an assembly is to be ascertained from the acts and
language of the members composing it, and from a
consideration of all the surrounding circumstances. It may be
gathered from the course of conduct adopted by the members
of the assembly. What the common object of the unlawful
assembly is at a particular stage of the incident is essentially
a question of fact to be determined, keeping in view the nature
of the assembly, the arms carried by the members, and the
behaviour of the members at or near the scene of the incident.
It is not necessary under law that in all cases of unlawful
assembly, with an unlawful common object, the same must be
translated into action or be successful. Under the Explanation
to Section 141, an assembly which was not unlawful when it
was assembled, may subsequently become unlawful. It is not
necessary that the intention or the purpose, which is
necessary to render an assembly an unlawful one comes into
existence at the outset. The time of forming an unlawful intent
is not material. An assembly which, at its commencement or
even for some time thereafter, is lawful, may subsequently
become unlawful. In other words it can develop during the
course of incident at the spot eo instante.
10. Section 149, IPC consists of two parts. The first part of
the section means that the offence to be committed in
prosecution of the common object must be one which is
committed with a view to accomplish the common object. In
order that the offence may fall within the first part, the offence
must be connected immediately with the common object of the
unlawful assembly of which the accused was member. Even if
the offence committed is not in direct prosecution of the
common object of the assembly, it may yet fall under Section
141, if it can be held that the offence was such as the
members knew was likely to be committed and this is what is
required in the second part of the section. The purpose for
which the members of the assembly set out or desired to
achieve is the object. If the object desired by all the members
is the same, the knowledge that is the object which is being
pursued is shared by all the members and they are in general
agreement as to how it is to be achieved and that is now the
common object of the assembly. An object is entertained in
the human mind, and it being merely a mental attitude, no
direct evidence can be available and, like intention, has
generally to be gathered from the act which the person
commits and the result therefrom. Though no hard and fast
rule can be laid down under the circumstances from which
the common object can be culled out, it may reasonably be
collected as noted above from the nature of the assembly,
arms carried and behaviour at or before or after the scene of
occurrence. The word \021knew\022 used in the second limb of the
section implies something more than a possibility and it
cannot be made to bear the sense of \021might have been known\022.
Positive knowledge is necessary. When an offence is
committed in prosecution of the common object, it would
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 5
generally be an offence which the members of the unlawful
assembly knew was likely to be committed in prosecution of
the common object. That, however, does not make the
converse proposition true; there may be cases which would
come within the second part but not within the first part. The
distinction between the two parts of Section 149 cannot be
ignored or obliterated. In every case it would be an issue to be
determined, whether the offence committed falls within the
first part or it was an offence such as the members of the
assembly knew to be likely to be committed in prosecution of
the common object and falls within the second part. However,
there may be cases which would be within first part of the
offences committed in prosecution of the common object
would also be generally, if not always, within the second part,
namely, offences which the parties knew to be likely
committed in the prosecution of the common object. (See
Chikkarange Gowda and others v. State of Mysore AIR 1956
SC 731).
11. A 4-Judge\022s Bench of this Court in Masalti and Ors. v.
State of U.P. (AIR 1965 SC 202) observed as follows:
\023Then it is urged that the evidence given
by the witnesses conforms to the same
uniform pattern and since no specific part is
assigned to all the assailants, that evidence
should not have been accepted. This
criticism again is not well-founded. Where a
crowd of assailants who are members of an
unlawful assembly proceeds to commit an
offence of murder in pursuance of the
common object of the unlawful assembly, it
is often not possible for witnesses to describe
accurately the part played by each one of the
assailants. Besides, if a large crowd of
persons armed with weapons assaults the
intended victims, it may not be necessary
that all of them have to take part in the
actual assault. In the present case, for
instance, several weapons were carried by
different members of the unlawful assembly,
but it appears that the guns were used and
that was enough to kill 5 persons. In such a
case, it would be unreasonable to contend
that because the other weapons carried by
the members of the unlawful assembly were
not used, the story in regard to the said
weapons itself should be rejected.
Appreciation of evidence in such a complex
case is no doubt a difficult task; but criminal
courts have to do their best in dealing with
such cases and it is their duty to sift the
evidence carefully and decide which part of it
is true and which is not.\024
12. To similar effect is the observation in Lalji v. State of U.P.
(1989 (1) SCC 437). It was observed that:
\023Common object of the unlawful assembly
can be gathered from the nature of the
assembly, arms used by them and the
behaviour of the assembly at or before the
scene of occurrence. It is an inference to be
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 5
deduced from the facts and circumstances of
each case.\024
13. Above being the position in law on the background facts,
the High Court\022s judgment directing acquittal of the
respondent does not suffer from infirmity.
14. The appeals are dismissed.