Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 517 of 2000
PETITIONER:
NALLABOTHU VENKAIAH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF ANDHRA PRADESH
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 20/08/2002
BENCH:
Y K SABHARWAL & H K SEMA.
JUDGMENT:
SEMA, J
The appellant along with 15 other accused was put to trial
before III Additional Sessions Judge, Guntur in Sessions Case No. 18
of 1994 to answer the following charges:
"Charge No. 1: - That you A1 to A16 at about 5.30 p.m.
on 13th day of October, 1992 on the highway between
Sattenapalli and Macherla in between 38/2 and 38/4
K.M. Stone after crossing Pakalapadu major canal,
formed into one group and were members of unlawful
assembly and did in prosecution of the common object of
such assembly viz., of killing the deceased person R.
Venkateswarlu son of China Bapaiah, 35 years, V.A.O.
of Tondapi village, and rioting and at that time you were
armed with deadly weapons like country made bombs,
axes, spears and knives which are dangerous in nature
and thereby committed an offence punishable under
section 148 of the Indian Penal Code and within my
cognizance;
Charge No. 2: - That you A-1 to A-16 at about the same
time, date and place and in the course of same transaction
as mentioned above; charged the deceased
R.Venkateswarlu son of China Bapaiah, 35 years, V.A.O.
of Tondapi village while he was coming on the motor
cycle and when he reached the spot, all of you emerged
from the bushes on either side of the road and that A10,
A12, A8 and A16 hurled bombs and when the deceased
fell down all of you surrounded him and that A-1, A-9
and A-10 of you axed on his head and that A-1 and A-2
of you cut the throat of the deceased with axe and long
knife and that A-4, A-6 and A-7 of you stabbed him with
spears on abdomen and lower portion and that A-5
stabbed him with spear on abdomen and that A-3 axed
him near right ear, A-8 stabbed with spear on his neck;
A-10 axed on the fore-head of him, A-11, A-12 and A-13
with spears and A-14 and A-16 with axes attacked the
deceased indiscriminately and A-15 with knife stabbed
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on his neck resulting in his death instantaneously and
thereby committed an offence punishable under section
302 read with 149 of the Indian Penal Code and within
my cognizance;
Charge No. 3: - That you A-8, A-10, A-12 and A-16 of
you at about the same time, date and place and in the
course of same transaction as mentioned above; hurled
countrymade bombs at the deceased R. Venkateswarlu in
order to kill him while in possession of the Explosive
Substances which are dangerous in nature which bombs
exploded and thereby committed an offence punishable
under sections 3 and 5 of Explosive Substances Act and
within my cognizance."
The substance of the above charges is that on 13th October,
1992 at about 5.30 p.m. accused 1-16 formed themselves into an
unlawful assembly and caused the death of one R. Venkateswarlu by
hurling bombs and causing bodily injuries by axes, knives and spears.
During the trial accused No. 2 expired and the trial against him
stood abated. After concluding of the trial, the trial judge found that
accused Nos. 1, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8 and 10 were guilty of the offence
punishable under Section 302 read with Section 149 I.P.C. They were
convicted and sentenced to suffer imprisonment for life and also to pay
a fine of Rs. 500/- and in default to suffer simple imprisonment for 3
months. They were further sentenced to undergo Rigorous
Imprisonment for one year each for the offence under Section 148
I.P.C. Both the sentences were ordered to run concurrently. The trial
judge, however, found that accused Nos. 8, 10, 12 and 16 were not
guilty of the offence under Sections 3 and 5 of the Explosive
Substances Act and they were, accordingly, acquitted under the said
charge. Rest of the accused, i.e. accused Nos. 6, 9 and 11 to 16 were
not found guilty of the offences, for which they were charged.
Being aggrieved, accused Nos. 1, 3 and 4 preferred Criminal
Appeal No. 555 of 1998 and accused Nos. 5, 7, 8 and 10 preferred
Criminal Appeal No. 556 of 1998 in the High Court.
The High Court, by the impugned order dated 31st January,
2000, reappreciated the evidence and acquitted accused Nos. 3 and 4 in
Crl. A. No. 555 of 1998 and their appeal was allowed to that extent.
The High Court also allowed Criminal Appeal No. 556 of 1998 and
acquitted accused Nos. 5, 7, 8 and 10 and their conviction and sentence
under the aforesaid sections of law was set aside. The High Court,
however, confirmed the conviction and sentence of accused No. 1, ( in
Crl.Appeal No.555 of 1998) under Section 302 I.P.C. (simpliciter).
The present appeal has been preferred by accused No. 1 (Nallabothu
Venkaiah), the appellant before us. No acquittal appeals have been
preferred by the State.
Before we advert to the points urged we may, at this stage,
point out that the High Court has acquitted accused Nos. 3, 4, 5, 7, 8
and 10 on the ground that P.Ws. 1-3, who were the eye-witnesses to
the occurrence were inimically disposed to the accused persons and
their evidence was unreliable. The High Court also disbelieved the
evidence of P.W.1 as he falsely deposed that his scooter bear the
registration No.APG 2253. While acquitting the aforesaid accused,
the High Court discarded the evidence of P.Ws. 1, 2 and 3 eye-
witnesses by rendering the following reasons:
"The investigation further discloses that the vehicle
bearing registration number APG 2253 is a tractor, which
was owned by the Commissioner of Guntur Municipality
and under these circumstances, we hold that whatever
evidence is given by P.W.1 is not in fairness. He went to
make involvement as many accused as he can do. The
evidence of P.W.1 discloses that there has been party
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faction in the village. He has been accused in number of
cases, which were filed by the deceased and his party.
To this effect a clear admission is given by him in the
cross-examination. Therefore, we are not prepared to
believe the evidence of P.W.1 as a whole.
P.W.2 is a pillion seat driver. He has stated in his
evidence, what all stated by P.W.1 but while making
individual involvement P.W.2 has stated accused Nos. 1,
10 and 9 hacked the deceased on his head with an axe. It
means P.W.2 did not involve accused Nos. 2 and 3 in the
incident. They came for the first time and hacked the
deceased but A1 appears to be common when the
deceased was attacked.
P.W.3 also claimed to be an eye-witness to the incident.
He has come with a different story altogether. P.W.3 was
a pillion seat driver of the motor cycle of the deceased.
He stated in his evidence when he had seen the accused
hurling bombs at him he requested the deceased to slow
down the scooter. Then he jumped from the motor cycle
and went towards bushes. He further stated that the
deceased went to some distance and fell down. Then A1
hacked the deceased on his neck with an axe and
thereafter, he made involvement of A2, A10, A5, A7, A6,
A3, A8 and A15.
This witness is also an accused in a number of cases
along with P.Ws. 1 and 2. Therefore, it is very much
clear from the evidence of P.Ws. 1, 2 and 3 that there has
been a party faction and cases after cases were filed
against each other.
Considering the evidence of important eye witnesses, we
are convinced that A1 was definitely present at the scene
of offence and the presence of the other accused is
doubtful because of inconsistency in the evidence of
P.Ws. 1 to 3. Therefore, we are of the considered view
that the other accused may be entitled for the benefit of
doubt."
The contention that the eye-witnesses P.Ws. 1, 2 and 3 were
inimically disposed to the accused has been rejected by the Trial
Court by assigning cogent reasons and considering the medical and
other corroborative evidence. The trial judge critically discussed the
evidence of eye-witnesses, namely, P.Ws. 1, 2 and 3 and also
analytical description of the part played by each of the accused in
causing murderous assault on the deceased and accepted the eye-
witnesses account as natural and reliable. P.W.1 stated in his
evidence that on the fateful day, he went to Sattenapalli to purchase
pesticides. After purchasing pesticides, he came to the centre, where
P.W.2 was also standing and both of them started on his scooter to go
to the village. When both of them were going on the scooter, they
saw the deceased and P.W.3 Muppalla Ramaiah at a medical shop.
When they were proceeding, P.W.3 and the deceased also followed
them. He stated that after passing Pakalapadu Major canal, they
suddenly heard the sounds of explosion of bombs. Then P.W.2,
pillion rider on the scooter of P.W.1, informed him that the bombs had
been hurled against the deceased and asked him to stop the scooter.
Then he stopped the scooter and saw P.W.3 Muppalla Ramaiah
jumping from the motor cycle of the deceased and running towards
northern side fields. P.W.3 was the pillion rider on the motor cycle of
the deceased. He further stated that at that time, the deceased - Rayidi
Venkateswarlu was driving the motor cycle slowly. Then accused
Nos. 8, 10, 12 and 16 hurled bombs. Accused Nos. 1 to 3 came
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opposite from southern side armed with axes and hacked on the head
of the deceased. Then the deceased fell down. Accused No. 1 hacked
the deceased on his neck. A.10 hacked on the head of the deceased
with an axe. A.2 hacked on the neck of the deceased with a knife.
A.4 to A.7 stabbed the deceased on his stomach with spears. P.W.1
further stated that A.1 and A.10 chased them and then they ran
towards the scooter and the accused ran away towards south. P.W.1
also stated categorically that at that time, he had a scooter bearing No.
A.P.G. 2253, which he took from one Narasimharao, but he did not
get it registered in his name. He admitted that himself, deceased and
P.Ws. 2 and 4 were figuring as accused for assault of a woman and
A.1 is one of the witnesses in that case. He also admitted that himself
and PWs. 2 to 4 are shown as accused in the murder case of
Rachakonda Chandraiah. It, therefore, clearly indicates party factions
in the village.
P.W.2 stated in his evidence that on the day of the incident, he
went to Sattenapalli to purchase a washer of his motor and in his
return, he met P.W.1 and both of them started on the scooter of P.W.1
to go to the village. He further stated that when they reached Five
Lamps Centre, they found deceased and P.W.3 purchasing medicines
and when they crossed Major canal, they heard explosion of bombs
and saw P.W.3 jumping from the motor cycle of the deceased. He
also stated that accused Nos. 8, 10, 12 and 16 hurled bombs. He
further stated that the deceased was proceeding on his motor cycle by
escaping the bombs. He categorically stated that accused Nos. 1, 9
and 10 hacked on the head of the deceased with axes. A.2 hacked on
the neck of the deceased with an axe. A.10 hacked on the fore-head
of the deceased with an axe. A.2 stabbed on the neck of the deceased
with a knife. A.4, A.5 and A.7 stabbed the deceased with spears on
his stomach. P.W.2 also stated that A.1 and A.10 chased them for a
distance. P.W.2 also admitted about the cases pending against him
along with other witnesses.
P.W.3, who accompanied the deceased on a motor cycle also
deposed about the specific overt acts played by each and every
accused. He repeated the stories narrated by P.Ws. 1 and 2, as we
have referred, earlier. He gave a graphic description of each and
every overt act of the accused in causing murderous assault on the
deceased. He was a pillion rider of the deceased motor-cycle.
Immediately after the bomb was hurled, he ran towards the bush and
watched the entire incident from there. The witnesses and the accused
are all from the same village.
Dr. G. Vijaya Saradhi, Civil Assistant Surgeon, Government
Hospital, Sattenapalli, P.W.9, conducted Post Mortem Examination of
the deceased and found the following injuries:
"1. An incised wound with clean cut edges and tapering both
ends of 6 x 0.5 cms. x bone deep over the back of the right
side of the occiput.
2. An incised wound of 5 x 0.5 cms. x bone deep over right
occipital region. Anterior to injury No. 1. Edges are well
defined and contused.
3. An incised wound 7 x 0.5 cms. x bone deep over right
parietal area extending to right temporal with tapered edges
well defined and clean cut.
4. A cut laceration 3 x 0.5 cms. of right ear pinna rediating to
neck.
5. An incised wound 4 x 1.5 cms. x bone deep over the middle
of fore-head edges inverted and contused.
6. A cut incised 5 x 1.5 cms. x bone deep above the left-eye-
brow, the edges dragged and contused.
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7. A cut incised wound (chopped) of 3 x 1.5 cms. irregular and
bone deep fractured the mandible over right side crushing
the structures underneath the root of the tongue with
distortion of the face.
8. A cut laceration 2.5 x 0.5 cms. below the left ear with left
side of the mouth.
9. A cut incision 5 x 2 cms. x muscle deep, the irregular and
inverted edges transversely present over the front of the neck
below the thyroid cartilage cutting the underneath neck
structures, fractured the Hyoid cut the trachea, larynx and
oesophagus.
10. A cut incised wound 5 x 2 cms. x muscle deep with ragged
edges just below the injury No. 9 cutting all the neck
structures underneath the injury.
11. A punctured wound, vertical, clean edges inverted of 2 x 1
cms. x cavity deep over the left side of the neck.
12. A cut laceration transversely present of 2 1/2 x 1 cm x
cavity deep over the medial end of left collar bone.
13. A stab injury 2.5 x 1 cm. x cavity deep over shaped over the
left laoin area anteriorely.
14. A laceration 15 x 5 cms. with charred edges and nail over
the lateral aspect of left side of the thorax.
15. A stab injury 3 x 0.5 cms. with inverted and ragged edges of
cavity deep over the left side of the spigastrium with
stomach area.
16. A stab wound 4 x 0.5 cms x cavity deep with intestines.
Seen out side above the umblicus transversely present.
17. A stab wound 3 x 0.5 cms. x cavity deep with clean and
inverted edges over the right side of the umbilcus.
Obliquely present.
18. Multiple abrasion with charred edges over the lateral aspect
of left upper arm. Fore arm of about 0.25 to 1.5 cms. x 0.25
x 1 cms.
19. Multiple abrasions red with charred edges over the lateral
aspecty of left thigh of 0.2 to 10 cms.
20. Multiple abrasions 0.5 x 1 cm x 0.2 to 1 cm. Over the lateral
aspect of left side of the abdomen.
21. A cut laceration 2 x 0.5 cms x 1 cm. over the right hand at
the root of the thumb."
The contention of the counsel for the accused that evidence of P.Ws. 1
to 3 (eye-witnesses) cannot be accepted as they are chance witnesses and
highly interested and P.Ws. 1 and 2 are also related to the deceased and that
they are inimically disposed to the accused has been rejected by the Trial
Court by assigning cogent reasons. The Trial Court has accepted the
evidence of P.Ws. 1 to 3 as natural, reliable and truthful. After scanning
their deposition with care and caution, the trial judge has held that
admittedly all the accused and the prosecution witnesses are from the same
village and there is a faction in the village between the parties for the
reasons that the deceased Rayidi Venkateswarlu, who was President of the
village, was selected as Sarpanch and later on 26.2.1992, he resigned from
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the Presidentship. Then, A.1, who was the Vice-President, assumed charge
as President of the Village and since the deceased was popular in the village
and became the Village Administrative Officer, the appellant was facing
difficulties in getting quorum in the village. P.Ws. 1, 2 and 3 also admitted
that there were criminal cases involving both the parties. In such a
situation, the trial judge held that it will be difficult to get unbiased and
independent witnesses and, therefore, the eye-witness account of P.Ws. 1 to
3 cannot be thrown out on account of they being interested witnesses, if
otherwise there is no infirmity in the depositions of P.Ws. 1 to 3 and their
statements are reliable and creditworthy. We accept the view taken by the
Trial Court as correct appreciation of the evidence of PWs 1 to 3, in the facts
and circumstances of the case.
The contention of the counsel for the accused that the evidence of
P.W.1 cannot be accepted as he gave false evidence with regard to the
registration number of his scooter has also been rejected by the Trial Court.
In his statement, P.W.-1 stated that he had a scooter and it bears the
registration No. A.P.G. 2253. It is the contention of the counsel that the
registration No. cited by the P.W.1 belongs to a tractor and not to a scooter
and therefore, the statement of P.W.1 that he is owning a scooter bearing
registration No. A.P.G. 2253 is false and his evidence is not reliable. The
High Court has erroneously accepted this submission. The factum of P.W.1
driving a scooter on that day has been proved by P.Ws. 2 and 3. It is
immaterial which registration number the scooter bears. In his cross-
examination, P.W.-1 stated that he took the scooter from Narasimharao and
he did not get it registered in his name. He also denied the suggestion that
he had no scooter. The incident had happened on 13.10.92 and the witness
was examined on 17.11.97 after a gap of almost five years. It must be
remembered that human memories are apt to blur with the passage of time,
more so, when P.W.2 stated that the scooter was not registered in his name
at that time.
We have already quoted the reasoning rendered by the High Court
acquitting accused Nos. 3, 4, 5, 7, 8 and 10. The aforesaid finding has been
rendered by the High Court without discussing the depositions of P.Ws. 1
to 3 and by a cryptic order. The witnesses are inimically disposed to the
accused alone would be no ground to throw away their otherwise reliable,
natural and credit worthy statement. The test, in such circumstances, as
correctly adopted by the Trial Court, is that if the witnesses are interested,
the same must be scrutinized with due care and caution in the light of the
medical evidence and other surrounding circumstances. Animosity is
double edged sword and it can cut both sides. It can be a ground for false
implication. It can also be a ground for assault. We are constrained to
deprecate the manner in which the High Court threw away the eye-witness
accounts of P.Ws. 1 to 3 on ground of animosity albeit without any
discussion.
The Trial Court found from the deposition of PWs that the village
Tondapi is a faction ridden village where criminal cases are instituted
involving both the prosecution and accused parties and it is difficult to
secure unbiased and independent witnesses and after thorough scrutiny
accepted the evidence of P.Ws 1-3 as truthful and reliable.
It must be borne in mind that criminal justice system must be
alive to the expectation of the people. The principle that no innocent man
should be punished is equally applicable that no guilty man should be
allowed to go unpunished. Wrong acquittal of the accused will send a
wrong signal to the society. Wrong acquittal has its chain reactions, the law
breakers would continue to break the law with impunity, people then would
lose confidence in criminal justice system and would tend to settle their
score on the street by exercising muscle power and if such situation is
allowed to happen, woe would be the Rule of Law. What is apparent from
the aforesaid discussion is that the acquittal of the accused recorded by the
High Court was clearly contrary to the evidence on record and on the basis
of mis-appreciation of eye witnesses account. It is unfortunate that acquittal
appeals are not before us.
Two questions of law are raised before us. Firstly, whether the
appellant could be convicted under Section 302 I.P.C. (simpliciter) without
aid of Section 149 I.P.C. in the absence of substantive charge under Section
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302 I.P.C.? Secondly, whether the appellant could be convicted under self
same evidence on the basis of which other accused are acquitted?
Mr. A. Subba Rao, learned counsel appearing for the appellant
submits that since no separate substantive charge has been framed against
the appellant under Section 302 I.P.C., the conviction of the appellant is
bad. This question has been decided in a catena of decisions of this Court.
In Subran and Ors. v. State of Kerala (1993) 3 SCC 722 (deciding
review petition No. 1394 of 1993) six accused were arraigned for offences
punishable under Sections 302, 324, 323, 341, 148 read with Section 149
I.P.C. Accused No. 1 Subran alone was convicted under section 302
IPC(simpliciter) by the Trial Court and confirmed by the High Court on
appeal. The three-Judge Bench of this Court reviewing its earlier judgment
substituted paragraphs 10 and 11 of the previous judgment as under:
"Appellant 1, Subran, had rightly not been charged for the
substantive offence of murder under Section 302 IPC. Subran,
appellant 1, was not attributed the fatal injury or identified as
the person who caused the fatal blow. According to the medical
evidence, none of the injuries allegedly caused by appellant-
Subran either individually or taken collectively with the other
injuries caused by him, were sufficient in the ordinary course of
nature to cause death of Suku. There is no material on the
record to show that the injuries inflicted by Subran, with the
chopper, were inflicted with the intention to cause death of
Suku. Under these circumstances, the conviction of the first
appellant, Subran, for an offence under Section 302 IPC
simpliciter was neither desirable nor appropriate. The High
Court, it appears, failed to consider the scope of clause (3) of
Section 300 IPC in its proper perspective. In the facts of the
present case, the intention to cause murder of Suku, deceased
could not be attributed to the said appellant as the medical
evidence also unmistakably shows that the injuries attributed to
him were not sufficient in the ordinary course of nature to cause
death of the deceased. Appellant 1 Subran, therefore, could not
have been convicted for the substantive offence under Section
302 IPC and his conviction for the said offence cannot be
sustained. That Suku died as a result of cumulative effect of all
the injuries inflicted on him by all the four appellants stands
established on the record. The question, therefore, arises what
offence did the four appellants commit?"
In Atmaram Zingaraji v. State of Maharashtra (1997) 7 SCC 41
nine persons were arraigned as accused before the trial court under Section
149/302/326 IPC. No other person, named or unnamed, alleged to have
participated in the crime. All the other 8 accused were acquitted by the High
Court. However, the appellant was convicted under Section 302 IPC with the
aid of Section 149. On appeal, this Court held:
"In either of the above situations therefore the sole convict can
be convicted under section 302 IPC (simpliciter) only on proof
of the fact that his individual act caused the death of the victim.
To put it differently, he would be liable for his own act only. In
the instant case, the evidence on record does not prove that the
injuries inflicted by the appellant alone caused the death; on the
contrary the evidence of the eyewitnesses and the evidence of
the doctor who held the post-mortem examination indicate that
the deceased sustained injuries by other weapons also and his
death was the outcome of all the injuries. The appellant,
therefore, would be guilty of the offence under Section 326 IPC
as he caused a grievous injury to the deceased with the aid of a
jambia (a sharp-cutting instrument)."
In Krishna Govind Patil v. State of Maharashtra 1964 (1) SCR
678 a four-Judge Bench of this Court has laid down that when four persons
are tried on a specific accusation that only they committed a murder in
furtherance of their common intention and three of them are acquitted, the
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fourth accused cannot be convicted with the aid of Section 34 IPC for the
effect of law would be that those who were with him did not conjointly act
with the fourth accused in committing the murder.
In Nethala Pothuraju and Ors. v. State of Andhra Pradesh (1992)
1 SCC 49 the appellant was called upon to face the trial along with other six
accused for offences under Sections 149, 141, 34 and 302 IPC. The trial
court convicted more than five persons under Section 302 r/w Section 149
IPC. The High Court acquitted some of the accused resulting in reducing the
number of the accused to less than five and thus rendered section 149
inapplicable. On appeal this Court, having regard to the murderous attack
by the appellant, as disclosed by the eye-witnesses and the number and
nature of injuries sustained, converted the conviction as one under Section
302 Section r/w Section 34 IPC.
In Marachalil Pakku and Anr. v. State of Madras AIR 1954 SC
648 seven accused were charged under Section 302 r/w Section 149 IPC.
The trial court convicted two appellants along with five others of having
constituted an unlawful assembly and committed murder and they were
convicted under Section 302 r/w Section 149 IPC. The High Court, on
appeal, gave benefit of doubt to five accused and acquitted them. In the
appeal before this Court, it was argued that the said five accused having
been acquitted and in the absence of a charge that five other unknown
persons constituted an unlawful assembly, the two appellants could not be
held members of the unlawful assembly which had the common object, the
three Judge Bench of this Court said:-
"We have not been able to understand how the High Court
could acquit these persons having held that the evidence of
P.Ws. 5 and 6 as to how Kannan was murdered by accused 1
and 2 stabbing him and the others holding him by his hands and
legs, was true. It also said that with regard to participation of
accused 3 to 7 they could not say that the prosecution evidence
was unreliable. On these findings, in our opinion, no scope was
left for introducing into the case the theory of the benefit of
doubt. We think that accused 3 to 7 were wrongfully acquitted.
Though their acquittal stands, that circumstance cannot affect
the conviction of the appellants under section 302 read with
section 149, I.P.C."
In Achhey Lal v. State of U.P. AIR 1978 SC 1233 as many as 15
named persons had taken part in the assault on the deceased. 14 accused had
been acquitted by the High Court but the conviction and sentences awarded
to the appellant by the Sessions Judge were upheld. This Court held that
there is no finding by the High Court that after acquittal of the accused the
unlawful assembly consisted of five persons or more, known or unknown,
identified or unidentified, the provisions of Sections 149 and 147 cannot be
invoked for convicting the sole accused as no individual act was assigned to
him.
Analytical reading of catena of decisions of this Court, the following
broad proposition of law clearly emerges: (a) the conviction under Section
302 simpliciter without aid of Section 149 is permissible if overt act is
attributed to the accused resulting in the fatal injury which is independently
sufficient in the ordinary course of nature to cause the death of the deceased
and is supported by medical evidence; (b) wrongful acquittal recorded by
the High Court, even if it stood, that circumstance would not impede the
conviction of the appellant under Section 302 r/w Section 149 I.P.C. (c)
charge under Section 302 with the aid of Section 149 could be converted
into one under Section 302 r/w Section 34 if the criminal act done by several
persons less than five in number in furtherance of common intention is
proved.
We have already held that accused Nos. 3, 4, 5, 7, 8 and 10 have been
wrongly acquitted by the High Court discarding the natural and reliable
evidence tendered by three eye-witnesses P.Ws. 1 to 3. If that is so, the
acquittal of accused Nos. 3, 4, 5, 7, 8 and 10 would not affect the conviction
of the appellant under Section 302 with the aid of Section 149 though their
acquittal stood because specific overt acts have been attributed to the
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appellant by eye-witnesses, corroborated by medical evidence, which are
independently sufficient in the ordinary course of nature to cause the death
of the deceased.
The consistent evidence of P.Ws. 1 to 3 is that after the bomb was
hurled at the deceased, the deceased was driving his motor-cycle slowly.
P.W.3, who was a pillion rider of the motor-cycle of the deceased, jumped
out of the motor-cycle, rushed to the bush and watched the whole incident
under the bush. He specifically stated that after the deceased fell down
accused No. 1 hacked axe blows on the neck of the deceased. The same is
the statement of P.W.-1, who was riding a scooter on the same road at that
particular time. The same is the statement of P.W.2. P.W.2 was a pillion
rider on the scooter of P.W.1. The witnesses and the accused are from the
same village and the incident had happened on 13th October, 1992 at about
5.30 p.m. There cannot be any scope of mistaken identity of the accused.
P.W.4 stated that he knew all the accused and the deceased. On the
day of the incident, while proceeding on his tractor on the Pakalapadu major
canal he saw all the accused armed with axes, spears and knives were going
on the road.
Dr. G. Vijaya Saradhi was examined as P.W.9. He conducted post
mortem examination of the deceased and found as many as 21 injuries, as
referred to in the earlier part of the judgment. Injury Nos. 7, 9 and 10 are
incise wounds. On internal examination, the doctor found, "neck shows
upper air passes were cut. Left castrotid vessels were cut, muscles were cut.
Haematoma present on left side of the neck. This corresponds to injuries 9
and 10." The doctor opined that "the patient would appear to have died of
hemorrhage and shock, and injuries to upper air passages, manor vessels,
and vital organs liver, kidney, resulting from multiple injuries."
From the overt acts attributed to the accused appellant by P.Ws. 1 to
3, corroborated by medical evidence, it is apparent that the appellant has
caused murderous assault resulting in the death of the deceased.
The next contention of Mr. Subba Rao, learned counsel for the
appellant that on the self same evidence, the other accused had been
acquitted and, therefore, the appellant could not have been convicted relying
upon the same evidence. This contention deserves to be rejected. Firstly,
because we have already held that the acquittal of the other accused,
rendered by the High Court, was wrong and based on misappreciation of
evidence. Secondly, as pointed out, eye-witness version is supported by the
medical evidence attributing specific overt acts to the appellant. The ocular
and medical evidence on record clearly establish the guilt of the appellant
beyond reasonable doubt for causing the death of the deceased.
For the reasons aforestated, there is no merit in this appeal and it is
accordingly dismissed.