Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KARAN SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
04/11/1964
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
BACHAWAT, R.S.
CITATION:
1965 AIR 1037 1965 SCR (2) 1
CITATOR INFO :
F 1991 SC 318 (17)
ACT:
Murder-Common intention-Separate trials of actual murderer
and accomplice-Former acquitted while latter convicted on
the basis of having common intention with former--Conviction
whether justified-Indian Panel Code, 1860 (Act 45 of 1860),
s. 34.
HEADNOTE:
R shot at two persons and in consequence one died while the
other did not. The appellant who himself carried a gun was
present at the spot along with six others variously armed.
R absconded, and the appellant along with the six other
persons mentioned above was tried for offences under ss. 302
and 307 read with ss. 148 and 149 of the Indian Penal Code.
The Sessions Judge convicted only the appellant giving
benefit of doubt to others. The appellant filed an appeal
before the High Court. After his conviction but before his
appeal was heard, R was arrested, put up for trial on the
same charges, and acquitted. The appellant’s appeal before
the High Court was dismissed but his conviction was altered
and instead of ss. 302 and 307 Indian Penal Code read with
ss. 148 and 149 he was convicted for offences under ss. 302
and 307 of the Code read with s. 34. The appellant came to
this Court in further appeal.
It was contended that in view of the acquittal of R by the
Sessions Judge, from which there had been no appeal, it was
not open to the High Court to hold that the appellant was
guilty of murder and attempt to murder under ss. 302 and 307
read with s. 34, by finding that R who shared a common
intention with him shot the deceased dead and attempted to
murder another.
HELD : In spite of the acquittal of a person in one case, it
is open to the court in another case, to proceed on the
basis-if the evidence warrants it-that the acquitted person
was guilty of the offence of which he had been tried in the
other case, and to find in the later case that the person
tried in it was guilty of an offence under s. 34 by virtue
of having committed the offence along with the acquitted
person. Each case has to be decided on the evidence led in
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it and this irrespective of any view of the same act that
might have been taken on different evidence led in another
case. [4E-G]
Marachalil Pakku v. State of Madras, A.I.R. 1954 S.C. 648,
Bombadhar Pradhan v. State of Orissa and Sunder Singh v.
State of Punjab, A.I.R. 1962 S.C. 1211, relied upon.
Pritam Singh v. State of Punjab A.I.R. 1956 S.C. 415,
Sambasivam V. Public Prosecutor, Federation of Malaya L.R.
[1950] A.C. 458 and Krishna Govind Patil v. State of
Maharashtra, distinguished.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeal No. 55
of 1963.
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Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order, dated
August 27, 1962, of the Madhya Pradesh High Court (Gwalior
Bench) at Gwalior in Criminal Appeal No. 18 of 1961.
B. C. Misra, for the appellant.
Al. S. K. Sastri and 1. N. Shroff, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Sarkar J. The appellant, Ramhans, and six other persons were
alleged to have committed the murder of Gabde and to have
attempted to murder Ramchandra. The deceased and Ramchandra
are said to have belonged to one party while the alleged
assailants belonged to another, and between these two
parties there had been great enmity for some time past. It
was said that about midnight of November 18, 1959, while the
deceased and Ramchandra and certain other persons were
sleeping on a Tiwaria (terrace), the assailants entered the
place and Ramhans shot Gabde dead with a gun and fired two
shots at Ramchandra with intent to kill him but only
succeeded in injuring him and that all this time the
appellant was standing there armed with a gun and the other
persons were also there armed variously and that all had
entered the place with the common intention of committing
the offences.
Ramhans had absconded and so the appellant and the other six
alleged assailants were put up for trial for offences under
ss. 302 and 307 read with ss. 148 and 149 of the Indian
Penal Code for the murder of Gabde and the attempt to murder
Ramchandra. The learned Sessions Judge convicted the
appellant of these offences but acquitted the other six
persons tried along with him, giving them the benefit of
doubt. The appellant preferred an appeal to the High Court
of Madhya Pradesh. After the conviction of the appellant by
the learned Sessions Judge but before his appeal could be
heard, Ramhans had been arrested, put up for trial on the
same charges and acquitted.
Before the High Court the appellant contended that Ramhans
having been acquitted the appellant could not be held
constructively liable for the offences with the aid of s.
149 of the Code. The High Court rejected this contention
relying upon the judgments of this Court in Marachalil Pakku
v. The State of Madras,(1) Bombadhar Pradhan v. State of
Orissa (2) and Sunder Singh v. State of Punjab (3). The
following observation appears in the judgment
(1) A.I.R. 1954 S.C. 648. (2) 11956] S.C.R. 206.
(3) A.I.R. 1962 S.C. 121 1.
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of the High Court : "Relying on Ramchandra’s direct
testimony as supported by Dwarka, Matadin and Maharajsingh,
I would hold that Gabde’s murder was committed by Ramhans by
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firing a gun at him and that Ramhans also fired two shots
from his gun at Ramchandra in order to kill him. Karan
Singh was at this time standing armed with a gun by the side
of Ramhans.......... I would, therefore, hold that the
offence of Gabde’s murder and attempt to commit the murder
of Ramchandra were committed by Ramhans in furtherance of
the common intention of both himself and the present
appellant Karan Singh. The case for the prosecution had at
all stages been that both Ramhans and Karan Singh had gone
inside the Tiwaria armed with guns and that Karan Singh
throughout the incident standing by the side of Ramhans
armed with a gun. On these facts S. 34 I.P.C. would clearly
apply to the case against the present appellant Karan
Singh." In this view of the matter the High Court convicted
the appellant Karan Singh under ss. 302 and 307 both read
with S. 34 of the Code instead of the earlier sections read
with ss. 148 and 149 as had been done by the learned
Sessions Judge. The appellant has come to this Court in
further appeal.
The only question argued in this appeal is whether in view
of the acquittal of Ramhans by the learned Sessions Judge
from which there had been no appeal, it was open to the High
Court to hold that the appellant was guilty of murder under
S. 302 read with S. 34 by finding on the evidence that
Ramhans who shared a common intention with him, shot the
deceased dead and attempted to murder Ramchandra. In the
High Court reliance had been placed on behalf of the
appellant on the judgment of this Court in Pritam Singh v.
State of Punjab(1). That case referred with approval to the
judgment of the Judicial Committee in Sambasivam v. Public
Prosecutor, Federation of Malay(2) where it was observed
that "the effect of a verdict of acquittal...... is not
completely stated by saying that the person acquitted cannot
be tried again for the same offence. To that it must be
added that the verdict is binding and conclusive in all
subsequent proceedings between the parties to the
adjudication." As the High Court pointed out, that observa-
tion has no application to the present case as here the
acquittal of Ramhans was not in any proceeding to which the
appellant was a party. Clearly, the decision in each case
has to turn on the evidence led in it; Ramhans’s case
depended on the evidence led there while the appellant’s
case had to be decided only on the evidence led in it. The
evidence led in Ramhans’s case and the decision there
(1) A.I.R. 1956 S.C. 415. (2) L.R. [1952] A.C. 458,479.
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arrived at on that evidence would be wholly irrelevant in
considering the merits of the appellant’s case. We may add
here that Mr. Misra appearing for the appellant did not in
this Court rely on Pritam Singh’s(1) case.
Mr. Misra contended that the decision of this Court in
Krishna Govind Patil v. State of Maharashtra(1) showed that
the High Court was wrong in ignoring the fact of the
acquittal of Ramhans. We are unable to accept that
contention. The point there considered really was whether
when four persons had been charged with the commission of an
offence of murder read with s. 34 and the trial Court had
acquitted three of them, it was legal to convict the
remaining accused of the offence of murder read with s. 34.
The High Court had held that could be done. This Court set
aside the judgment of the High Court mainly on the ground
that such a decision would result in conflicting findings.
It was observed, "while it (the High Court) acquitted
accused 1, 3 and 4 under s. 302 read with section 34 of the
Indian Penal Code, it convicted accused 2 under S. 302 read
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with s. 34, of the said Code, for having committed the
offence jointly with the acquitted persons. This is a
legally impossible position." That case no doubt discussed
various situations where it is possible after acquitting
certain persons to hold that the conviction of other or
others was justified under s. 34 on the ground that the
evidence showed that there were other unknown persons who
were associated with those convicted though the charge did
not mention them. With this aspect of the matter we are not
concerned in this case and neither was the case of Krishna
Govind Patil(1).
We are, therefore, of opinion that the judgment in Krishna
Govind Patils(1) case does not assist the appellant at all.
On the other hand we think that the judgments earlier
referred to on which the High Court relied, clearly justify
the view that in spite of the acquittal of a person in one
case it is open to the Court in another case to proceed on
the basis--of course if the evidence warrants it-that the
acquitted person was guilty of the offence of which he had
been tried in the other case and to find in the later case
that the person tried in it was guilty of an offence under
S. 34 by virtue of having committed the offence along with
the acquitted person. There is nothing in principle to
prevent this being done. The principle of Sambasivam’s(2)
case has no application here because the two cases we are
concerned with are against two different persons though for
the commission of the same offence.
(1) [1964] 1 S. C. R. 678. (2) L. R. 11952] A.C. 458,479.
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Furthermore, as we have already said, each case has to be
decided on the evidence led in it and this irrespective of
any view of the same act that might have been taken on
different evidence led in another case.
In the result the appeal fails and is dismissed.
Appeal dismissed.
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