Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF RAJASTHAN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
TEJA RAM AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 01/02/2000
BENCH:
D.P.Mohapatro, K.T.Thomas
JUDGMENT:
Thomas J.
It was by a midnight blitz that two sleeping inmates
of a dwelling house were axed to death by armed assailants.
One of the victims was the old mother of the other victim.
The younger among them was not the target of the assailants
but he was mistaken for his brother. In the Sessions court
seven persons were put on trial as the assailants in the
aforesaid double murder episode. Out of them six were
convicted under Section 302 read with Section 149 of the
Indian Penal Code and for certain other lesser but allied
offences. They were sentenced to imprisonment for life for
the principal offence and for lesser terms for the lesser
offences. When they appealed a Division Bench of the High
Court of Rajasthan set aside the conviction and sentence and
acquitted them all. State of Rajasthan has, therefore, come
up in appeal to this Court by special leave.
As there were seven accused in the case, out of which
six are the respondents now, they can be referred to as
accused in the same rank as they were arrayed in the trial
court so that possible mistake in identifying them can be
prevented. A1 Teja Ram, A2 Ram Lal and A3 Bhanwar Lal are
the sons of one Maga Ram and they are cousins of deceased
Ram Lal. Other accused are close relatives of those two
accused. The backdrop of the case unfurls a story of
continued hostility which existed as between the cousins on
account of disputes over landed properties. PW15 Mota Ram
(son of deceased Smt. Gamni) had launched litigation
against A1 and A2. On a motion made by him the authorities
concerned have initiated proceedings under Section 107 of
the Code of Criminal Procedure against A1 Teja Ram and A2
Ram Lal. Thus, they looked upon each other with bitterness.
The incident happened on the night next morning of
which was a Sunday (13.9.1981). Prosecution case is that
all the seven accused, armed with axe and lathis etc.
travelled in a tractor and at a subsequent stage they walked
on foot and reached the house of the deceased by midnight.
Deceased Ram Lal and his mother Gamni were sleeping
inside the room adjoining the gate of their house. Mota Ram
used to sleep at that place but on the fateful night Ram Lal
thought it convenient to sleep there as that was the cruel
game of his fate. The assailants entered into the room and
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hacked both the deceased with axe. The squall of the
victims rumbled the neighbour-hood. All those who heard it
rushed to the scene but by the time they reached the
assailants took to their heels and escaped from the place.
Other inmates of the house carried the injured in a vehicle
to the hospital and on the way Mota Ram (PW15) informed the
police about the incident at the Police Out Post at Auwa.
From there he proceeded to Kharchi police station and lodged
the FIR. The SHO (PW21) recorded the statement of both the
injured who were removed to the hospital thereafter. Ram
Lal died on the same night, while his mother lived for a
week more fighting with death and she too succumbed to the
injuries on 21.9.1981.
Trial court, while convicting six accused, mainly
relied on Ex. P31 and Ex.P32 which are the two dying
declarations attributed to deceased Ram Lal and Gamni
respectively which were recorded by PW21, the Investigating
Officer. Besides the above, the trial court relied on
certain circumstances, such as the testimony of witnesses
who reached the scene saw the accused running away with axes
and lathis, and recovery of the weapons effected pursuant to
the informations elicited from the accused.
But the Division Bench of the High Court of Rajasthan
declined to act on the two dying declarations. High Court
was not persuaded to place any reliance on the witnesses who
claimed to have seen the assailants running away. High
Court put-forth two reasons for adopting that course. First
is that prosecution failed to examine any independent
witness even though such persons were residing in the
neighbour-hood, and the witnesses examined by the
prosecution for that point are close relatives of the
deceased. Second is that there are discrepancies between
their versions and such discrepancies are of a substantial
nature. The High Court declined to act on the evidence
relating to the recovery of axes for the main reason that
since human blood could be detected only on one of them
while origin of the blood on the other was not established,
there was room for entertaining doubt as to the real person
whose blow with the axe would have caused the injury.
In the final end the Division Bench, after voicing a
lamenting chord that it is unfortunate that two cold
blooded murders are going unpunished in this case,
expressed its view that it is unsafe to maintain the
conviction. Hence, the High Court set aside the conviction
and sentence passed on the respondents.
Though on the defence side a number of witnesses were
examined neither the trial court nor the appellate court
placed any reliance on any of them. Nor did the appellant
make any endeavour to convince us that those witnesses are
of any use for the defence.
Mr. Aruneshwar Gupta, learned counsel for the State
of Rajasthan contended that the approach made by the High
Court is wholly untenable in discarding the best evidence on
the strength of some trivial reasons. Mr. Doongar Singh,
advocate for the accused argued in extenso supporting the
reasoning of the High Court and strongly pleading for
maintaining the acquittal.
We are in agreement with the argument of Shri Doongar
Singh that the High Court was justified in not acting on the
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two dying declarations. The injuries found on the body of
Ram Lal as noted by PW9 Dr. Nand Kishore Sharma are the
following:
(i) Vertical incised wound with oozing of blood of 8.5
x 1.5 cms x brain deep on the right forehead region to
frontal region from eye brows to upward lacerated brain
tissues coming out from the wound. Injury was grievous and
was caused by sharp object.
(ii) Hematoma of both the Eyelids of right eye. (iii)
Haemotoma of left upper eye lid.
The same doctor noticed the following injury on the
body of Smt. Gamni: Vertical incised wound with blood
oozing with 8.5 x 3.0 x brain deep on the left temporal
region 3 cm above the ear pinna. Brain tissue was lying out
of the wound.
Even if the injured was able to mutter something or
even speak out something after sustaining the above injuries
it is extremely unsafe to place any credence on such
statements as the brain functions of the injured would have
impaired due to the brain injury.
But we find it difficult to side-step the remaining
circumstances as lightly as Division Bench of the High Court
has down-staged them. The first among the circumstances is
the strong motive for A1 Teja Ram and A2 Ram Lal because the
family of Mota Ram had moved the authorities to initiate
proceedings against them under Section 107 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure. This shows the acuteness of hostility
which prevailed as between the two warring factions. That
aspect remains undisputed, though the defence contention is
that they were falsely implicated on account of that enmity.
Of course that possibility has to be eschewed before
counting the enmity aspect as a circumstance against the
accused. For that endeavour the Court has to look at other
circumstances presented by the prosecution against the
accused.
PW13 (Idan), father of Mota Ram was sleeping inside
his house during the night. Mota Ram was also sleeping in
the same room. Gamni and her other son Ram Lal were
sleeping inside the room which adjoins the gate. PW13 said
in his evidence that on hearing the sound of a cry he woke
up and rushed to the place wherefrom the cry emanated and
the he saw all the accused, among whom he noticed A1 Teja
Ram and A2 Ram Lal holding Kulhadi (axe). They were seen
running away from the scene.
PW18 (Roopa Ram) who is brother of PW13 (Idan) who was
sleeping in his house situated in the neighbour-hood and his
son Chhoga Lal (PW4) who was sleeping inside the cabin of a
truck (which was parked in front of the house of the
deceased) also heard the sound of cry and they too rushed up
to the scene and saw all the accused scampering away from
the place and A1 and A2 had axes with them and others have
lathis.
PW10 (Oghada Ram) is another brother of PW13 (Idan)
and he too was residing close by. He also said that by
midnight he heard the sound of a loud cry from the house of
his brother. PW13 -Idan and he also rushed to the place and
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saw the accused, among them A1 (Teja Ram) and A2 (Ram Lal)
were in possession of axes.
The fact that the above witnesses were residing in the
immediate neighbour-hood was not disputed either in the
trial court or at the appellate stage. When the incident of
this nature occurs the persons who would normally run to the
place of occurrence are those living in the neighbour-hood.
But the High Court did not act on the testimony of those
persons who reached at the scene immediately on a very
fragile reasoning.
High Court pointed out a discrepancy in the evidence
as between two sets of witnesses, PW4 Chhogalal and PW15
Mota Ram said that the assailants were seen going out from
the western gate of the house while PW10 Oghada Ram and PW18
Roopa Ram said that the assailants went out through the
eastern gate. This according to the High Court is a very
substantial contradiction between them.
There is little justification for blowing up such a
motely discrepancy to the size of a mountain and then to
reject the whole evidence by depicting it as a material
discrepancy. What the High Court over-looked in the above
exercise was the core of the evidence and consideration of
it on broad probabilities. We have to bear in mind the time
when the occurrence took place the wee hours of the night,
the sleeping locality was woken up by the yelling voice
crying for help from ones own kith and kin. When they
rushed to the scene their focus would be on the victims and
the identity of the fleeing assailants. Perhaps some of the
assailants would have gone out through one gate and others
through the other gate. After all both gates were of the
same house and are situate close to each other.
We have absolutely no doubt that whoever rushed to the
spot on hearing the squeak or the out cry, it is most
unlikely that they would have remained where they were even
after hearing the cries. It is extremely probable that the
witnesses would have seen the fleeing assailants in such a
hubbub and if some witnesses did not correctly notice the
exact gate (out of the two gates) through which each one of
the assailants flushed out, it is not a good cause for
drawing any adverse inference against such witnesses.
Another reason which the High Court advanced to repel
the testimony of such a good number of probable witnesses is
that they are all close relatives of the deceased and that
independent witnesses were not examined by the prosecution.
The over-insistence on witnesses having no relation with the
victims often results in criminal justice going awry. When
any incident happens in a dwelling house the most natural
witnesses would be the inmates of that house. It is un-
pragmatic to ignore such natural witnesses and insist on
outsiders who would not have even seen any thing. If the
Court has discerned from the evidence or even from the
investigation records that some other independent person has
witnessed any event connecting the incident in question then
there is justification for making adverse comments against
non-examination of such person as prosecution witness.
Otherwise, merely on surmises the Court should not castigate
a prosecution for not examining other persons of the
locality as prosecution witnesses. Prosecution can be
expected to examine only those who have witnessed the events
and not those who have not seen it though the neighbour-
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hood may be replete with other residents also.
One of the circumstances which trial court relied on
as incriminating the accused is the recovery of two axes
(Kulhadi) on the strength of statements of A1 Teja Ram and
A2 Ram Lal. They were subjected to chemical examination and
the result is that both axes were found stained with blood.
When it was further subjected to test by Serologist the
blood on one axe was found to be of human origin, while the
blood stain on the other axe was found to have so
disintegrated that its origin became undetectable. Ex.P10
is the report of the Serologist.
Axes hidden beneath the rags were disinterred with the
help of information elicited from the accused. According to
PW 21 (the Investigation Officer) A1 Teja Ram told him I
have concealed the axe under some rags and kept it at the
left corner of the hut in my farm at Dhokwa. The axe
recovered pursuant thereto on 20.9.1981 as per Ex.P14
seizure memo was marked as Article No.8. Similarly, A2 Ram
Lal has told the Investigation Officer that I have
concealed the axe under some rags and placed it on a slab in
the store of my house. On the said information another axe
was recovered on 23.9.1981 as per Ex.P3 Seizure Memo. That
axe has been marked as Article 1.
The facts discovered from the aforementioned
statements and recovery of axes are that those weapons were
concealed by the said two accused.
Normally, the above circumstance should have been
given weighty consideration in the evaluation of
circumstantial evidence. But the High Court down staged it
on a reasoning which is difficult to sustain. This is what
the High Court has observed regarding the evidence relating
to the recovery of the two axes (Kulhadi).
The evidence of the blood stained Kulhadi is not
sufficient as the prosecution has not been able to prove
that Kulhadi which was stained with human blood was
recovered from whom. Thus it is not clear whether the
recovered Kulhadi was of Teja Ram or of Ramlal. The other
infirmity in the Chemical Examiners Report is that it does
not mention the extent of blood seen on the Kulhadi. It has
not been established clearly as to which particular accused,
the incriminating axe belonged. As such, it can not be used
against any one of these two accused.
Failure of the Serologist to detect the origin of the
blood, due to disintegration of the serum in the meanwhile,
does not mean that the blood stuck on the axe would not have
been human blood al all. Sometimes it happens, either
because the stain is too insufficient or due to
hematological changes and plasmatic coagulation that a
Serologist might fail to detect the origin of the blood.
Will it then mean that the blood would be of some other
origin? Such a guess work that blood on the other axe would
have been animal blood is unrealistic and far-fetched in the
broad spectrum of this case. The effort of the criminal
court should not be to prowl for imaginative doubts. Unless
the doubt is of a reasonable dimension which a judicially
conscientious mind entertains with some objectivity no
benefit can be claimed by the accused.
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Learned counsel for the accused made an effort to
sustain the rejection of the above said evidence for which
he cited the decisions in Prabhu Babaji vs. State of Bombay
[ AIR 1956 SC 51] and Raghav Prapanna Tripathi vs State of
UP [AIR 1963 SC 74]. In the former Vivian Bose J. has
observed that the Chemical Examiners duty is to indicate
the number of blood stains found by him on each exhibit and
the extent of each stain unless they are too minute or too
numerous to be described in detail. It was a case in which
one circumstance projected by the prosecution was just one
spot of blood on a dhoti. Their Lordships felt that blood
could equally have spurted on the dhoti of a wholly innocent
person passing through in the circumstances described by us
earlier in the judgment. In the latter decision this Court
observed regarding the certificate of a chemical examiner
that inasmuch as the blood stain is not proved to be of
human origin the circumstance has no evidentiary value in
the circumstances connecting the accused with the murder.
The further part of the circumstance in that case showed
that a shirt was seized from a dry cleaning establishment
and the proprietor of the said establishment had testified
that when the shirt was given to him for dry cleaning it was
not blood stained.
We are unable to find out from the aforesaid decisions
any legal ratio that in all cases where there was failure of
detecting the origin of the blood the circumstance arising
from recovery of the weapon would stand relegated to
disutility. The observations in the aforesaid cases were
made on the fact situation existed therein. They cannot be
imported to a case where the facts are materially different.
Learned counsel, in this context invited our attention
to one step which PW21 (Investigating Officer) had adopted
while preparing the seizure memos Ex.P3 and Ex.P.4. He
obtained the signature of the accused concerned in both the
seizure memos. According to the learned counsel the
aforesaid action of the Investigating Officer was illegal
and it has vitiated the seizure. He invited our attention
to section 162(1) of the Code which prohibits collecting of
signature of the person whose statement was reduced to
writing during interrogation. The material words in the
sub-section are these: No statement made by any person to
a police officer in the cause of investigation under the
chapter, shall, if reduced to writing, be signed by the
person making it;..
No doubt the aforesaid prohibition is in peremptory
terms. It is more a direction to the investigating officer
than to the court because the policy underlying the rule is
to keep witnesses free to testify in court unhampered by
anything which the police claim to have elicited from them.
(Tahsildar Singh vs. State of UP AIR 1959 SC 1012 and Razik
Ram vs. JS Chouhan AIR 1975 SC 667). But if any
Investigating Officer, ignorant of the said provision,
secures the signature of the person concerned in the
statement, it does not mean that the witnesses testimony in
the court would thereby become contaminated or vitiated.
The Court will only reassure the witness that he not bound
by such statement albeit his signature finding a place
thereon.
That apart, the prohibition contained in sub-section
(1) of Section 162 is not applicable to any proceedings made
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as per Section 27 of the Evidence Act. It is clearly
provided in sub-Section (2) of Section 162 which reads thus:
Nothing in this section shall be deemed to apply to any
statement falling within the provisions of clause (1) of
section 32 of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872, or to affect
the provisions of section 27 of that Act.
The resultant position is that the Investigating
Officer is not obliged to obtain the signature of an accused
in any statement attributed to him while preparing seizure
memo for the recovery of any article covered by Section 27
of the Evidence Act. But, if any signature has been
obtained by an investigating officer, there is nothing wrong
or illegal about it. Hence, we cannot find any force in the
contention of the learned counsel for the accused that the
signatures of the accused in Ex.P3 and P.4 seizure memo
would vitiate the evidence regarding recovery of the axes.
Learned counsel for the respondent pointed out the
evidence of Head Constable Jagan Nath (PW8) who was
in-charge of the police outpost at Auwa. The witness said,
initially in his evidence, that PW15 (Mota Ram who reached
the outpost soon after the incident) who reported about the
incident could not mention the names of the assailants as he
said that he did not know about the assailants. Learned
counsel, laying emphasis on the aforesaid evidence contended
that it knocks the bottom off the prosecution case. Shri
Aruneshwar Gupta, learned counsel for the State invited our
attention to a further portion of PW8s evidence where the
witness was permitted to be cross-examined by the Public
Prosecutor during which PW8 admitted having told the
Investigation Officer that PW15 had in fact mentioned the
names of the accused as the assailants.
One of the permitted modes of impeaching the credit of
a witness is proof of former statements which is
inconsistent with any part of his testimony, as indicated in
Section 155(3) of the Evidence Act. But the mode of using
such former statements for the purposes of contradicting the
witness is prescribed in Section 14 of the Evidence Act. It
cannot be contended that the aforesaid former statement was
not available for the defence to confront PW8 (Mota Ram)
since the Head Constable PW15 was examined later. It was
open to the defence to request for recalling the witness for
the purpose of further cross-examination to impeach his
veracity on the strength of the alleged former statement
which came on record subsequently (vide Naba Kumar Das vs.
Rudra Narayan Jana AIR 1923 PC 95). In this case PW15 was
not asked anything about what he told or not told PW8-Head
Constable. We are unable to appreciate the contention of
the learned counsel on that score. In view of the retracing
made by PW15 during later part of the cross-examination, we
are not disposed to give any further opportunity to the
accused to confront PW8 with that material. We are of the
considered view that the High Court has committed serious
error in rejecting very sturdy circumstances as against A1
Teja Ram and A2 Ram Lal the cumulative effect of which was
the irresistible conclusion that they were assailants in the
double murder wherein deceased Ram Lal and his mother Gamni
were killed.
We, therefore, set aside the order of acquittal in so
far as the said two accused (Teja Ram and Ram Lal) are
concerned. We restore the conviction and sentence passed on
them by the trial court. We direct the Sessions Judge, Pali
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(Rajasthan) to take immediate steps to put A1 Teja Ram and
A2 Ram Lal back in prison to undergo the remaining portion
of the sentence.