Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 1671 of 1995
PETITIONER:
Amar Singh
RESPONDENT:
Balwinder Singh & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 31/01/2003
BENCH:
S. Rajendra Babu & G.P. Mathur
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
G.P.Mathur, J.
This appeal has been preferred by the complainant (first informant)
against the judgment and order dated 26.9.1991 of High Court of Punjab &
Haryana by which the appeal preferred by the accused-respondent was
allowed and the judgment and order dated 28.7.1989 of Additional Sessions
Judge, Sangrur by which they had been convicted and sentenced was set
aside. The learned Additional Sessions Judge had convicted accused Surjit
Singh under Section 302 IPC and the remaining three accused, namely,
Balwinder Singh, Avtar Singh and Mal Singh under Section 302 read with
Section 34 IPC and had sentenced each of them to imprisonment for life and
a fine of Rs.5,000/- and in default to undergo six months rigorous
imprisonment. The accused were further convicted under Section 307 IPC
and were sentenced to rigorous imprisonment for four years and a fine of
Rs.500/- each and in default to undergo two months rigorous imprisonment.
All the sentences were ordered to run concurrently.
The case of the prosecution, in brief, is that at about 7.00 p.m. on
23.5.1987 the complainant, Amar Singh along with his sons Lakha Singh,
Gurbachan Singh and Bhan Singh and two others namely, Kashmira Singh
and Pritam Singh, was coming towards his outer house after having
unloaded the trolley of wheat straw. When they were at a distance of about
5-6 karams from the Baithak of Gurdial Singh, they saw that accused
Balwinder Singh (A-1) and Avtar Singh (A-2), armed with SBBL guns and
accused Surjit Singh (A-3) and Mal Singh (A-4) armed with DBBL guns
were standing there. A-1 entered the Baithak and fired a shot towards them
through the iron gauze of the window which hit Kashmira Singh. Surjit
Singh (A-3) fired a shot which hit Lakha Singh on his face and left side of
the neck and right hand and a second shot which hit Amar Singh. A-4 fired
a shot which hit Bhan Singh and a second shot which hit Gurbachan Singh.
A-2 fired a shot which hit Pritam Singh. Thereafter the accused ran away.
Amar Singh then carried Lakha Singh to his outer house and all the injured
persons also reached there. The injured persons were then taken to bus
stand, Sangrur, in the tractor trolley of Major Singh, where they hired two
taxies on which they proceeded to Christian Medical College, Ludhiana
where they were admitted at about 11.30 p.m. on the same night. Lakha
Singh succumbed to his injuries at about 8.00 a.m. on 24.5.1987.
Information was then sent from the hospital to S.H.O. Division No.3,
Ludhiana and thereafter PW 14 Sardara Singh, S.I. Police Station, Sangrur
came there and recorded the statement of Amar Singh. This was sent to PS,
Sangrur through Joga Singh, Constable and a formal FIR was recorded at
9.20 p.m. After investigation, charge sheet was submitted against the four
accused-respondents and in due course they were committed to the Court of
Sessions.
During the course of trial the prosecution examined in all 17 witnesses
including three eyewitnesses of the occurrence and filed some documentary
evidence. The accused in their statement under Section 313 Cr.P.C. denied
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the case of the prosecution and pleaded that they had been falsely
implicated. The defence of A-3 was that there was some dispute regarding
passage between Amar Singh and Sadhu Singh and in the said case his father
had appeared as a witness against the former. He further pleaded that he had
contested the election for the office of Sarpanch against Hari Singh in which
A-1 was polling agent of Hari Singh and that A-1 was removed from
service on his complaint regarding embezzlement. He thus submitted that he
had strained relations with A-1 and A-2 and as such he could not have joined
with them in the commission of the crime. The accused examined three
witnesses, namely, DW-1 Sadhu Singh, DW-2 Ram Singh and DW-3 Pritam
Singh in their defence.
The learned Sessions Judge believed the case of the prosecution and
convicted and sentenced the accused as mentioned earlier. The appeal
preferred by the accused-respondents was allowed by the High Court and
their conviction and sentence was set aside. The main grounds which
weighed with the High Court in allowing the appeal are that there was delay
in lodging the FIR; that two injured persons and one Ramesh whose name is
mentioned in the FIR were not examined as witnesses by the prosecution
and that the investigation of the case was tainted.
Before examining the contention raised by learned counsel for the
parties, it is necessary to briefly refer to the evidence, which has been
adduced by the prosecution. PW5 Dr. D.S. Mohan, Medical Officer, CMC
Hospital, Ludhiana admitted all the injured, namely Amar Singh, Bhan
Singh, Gurbachan Singh, Pritam Singh and Kashmira Singh in the casualty
ward on 23.5.1987. PW1 Dr. William F. Masih, Registrar, Department of
Surgery, CMC, Ludhiana, medically examined PW7 Bhan Singh at 11.30
p.m. on 23.5.1987 and found multiple pellet injuries 14 in number on lower
abdomen and also multiple pellet injuries on right fore-arm and right leg.
On internal examination, he found multiple small holes in the terminal ileum
and perforation in Caecum. Bhan Singh was discharged from hospital on
8.6.1987 after a surgery had been performed. The same doctor medically
examined PW8 Gurbahcan Singh at 12.45 a.m. in the night of 23/24.5.1987
and found pellet injuries on right hand and on epigastrium region. In the
opinion of the doctor the injuries no.4 and 5 of PW7 Bhan Singh were
dangerous to life and duration of injuries sustained by both the injured was
fresh. PW18 Dr. A.S. Cherian has proved the injury report of Lakha Singh,
who was admitted in the casualty ward at 11.30 p.m. on 23.5.1987 and also
the injury report of PW4 Amar Singh. PW3 Dr. George T.Abraham
examined Pritam Singh and Kashmira Singh from 12.45 a.m. onwards in the
night of 23/24.5.1987. Pritam Singh had sustained three gun shot injuries
on left thigh while Kashmira Singh had sustained a gun shot wound on his
right fore-arm. PW13 Dr. Varun Satija, Radiologist conducted X-ray
examination of the injuries of the injured Amar Singh, Lakha Singh, Bhan
Singh, Gurbachan Singh, Pritam Singh and Kashmira Singh and has proved
the X-ray examination reports prepared by him. Lakha Singh succumbed to
his injuries at about 8.00 a.m. on 24.5.1987. PW2 Dr. Virinder Kappal,
Medical Officer, Civil Hospital, Ludhiana conducted post-mortem
examination on the body of the deceased at 3.15 p.m. on 25.5.1987 and
found 16 gun shot wounds on different parts of the body. The internal
examination showed that injury no.1 had perforated the frontal bone and a
pellet was recovered from right cerebral cortex. One pellet had entered
through the angle of mandible and had fractured brain stem entering the
skull and it was found embedded in the brain matter. There was laceration
of the durameter and the brain matter. Pellets had also entered the chest
wall and were found in the lower lobe of right lung. According to doctor
the death had occurred due to injuries on vital organs namely brain and lung
and they were sufficient in the ordinary course of nature to cause death
individually and collectively. Thus, the medical evidence on record shows
that six persons received gun shot injuries in the incident out of whom the
injuries to Lakha Singh proved fatal and the injuries sustained by PW7 Bhan
Singh were dangerous to life. He was operated upon and was discharged
from the hospital after 16 days on 8.6.1987.
Coming to the ocular testimony, the prosecution examined three
injured witnesses, namely PW4 Amar Singh, PW7 Bhan Singh and PW8
Gurbachan Singh. In his statement in Court PW4 Amar Singh corroborated
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the version given by him in the FIR and stated that Jangir Dass Sadh had
previously given his land for cultivation to A-1 and A-2 on crop sharing
basis but last year he gave his land to him due to which the accused were
aggrieved. He has further stated that at about 7.00 p.m. on 23.5.1987 he was
coming to his inner house after unloading the trolley of wheat straw along
with his sons Lakha Singh, Gurbachan Singh and Bhan Singh and also
Kashmira Singh and Pritam Singh. When he was at a distance of 5-6
karams from the Baithak of Gurdial Singh, he saw accused A-1 and A-2
armed with SBBL guns and A-3 and A-4 armed with DBBL guns standing
in front of the Baithak of Gurdial Singh. A-1 then entered the Baithak and
fired a shot through the iron gauze of the window which hit Kashmira Singh.
The first shot fired by A-3 hit Lakha Singh on his face and the second shot
fired by him hit him on his arm and head. A-4 fired a shot which hit Bhan
Singh and another shot fired by him hit Gurbachan Singh. Thereafter, A-2
fired a shot which hit Pritam Singh. After causing the injuries, the accused
ran away. Lakha Singh had fallen down and was removed to the house.
All the injured were brought to bus stand Sangrur by Major Singh in a
tractor trolley, where they hired two taxies and proceeded to CMC,
Ludhiana, where they were admitted in the night. PW7 Bhan Singh and
PW8 Gurbachan Singh have given similar version of the incident and have
fully corroborated the testimony of PW4 Amar Singh. DW1 Sadhu Singh
and DW2 Ram Singh have deposed that S.I. Sardara Singh took away their
guns and DW3 Pritam Singh has merely stated that Panchayat election is
held under his supervision.
The learned Sessions Judge after placing reliance on the testimony of
the eye-witnesses and the medical evidence on record was of the opinion
that the case of the prosecution was fully established. Surprisingly the High
Court did not at all consider the testimony of the eye witnesses and
completely ignored the same. Section 384 Cr.P.C. empowers the Appellate
Court to dismiss the appeal summarily if it considers that there is no
sufficient ground for interference. Section 385 Cr.P.C. lays down the
procedure for hearing appeal not dismissed summarily and sub-section (2)
thereof casts an obligation to send for the records of the case and to hear the
parties. Section 386 Cr.P.C. lays down that after perusing such record and
hearing the appellant or his pleader and the Public Prosecutor, the Appellate
Court may, in an appeal from conviction, reverse the finding and sentence
and acquit or discharge the accused or order him to be re-tried by a Court of
competent jurisdiction. It is, therefore, mandatory for the Appellate Court
to peruse the record which will necessarily mean the statement of the
witnesses. In a case based upon direct eye-witness account the testimony of
the eye-witnesses is of paramount importance and if the Appellate Court
reverses the finding recorded by the Trial Court and acquits the accused
without considering or examining the testimony of the eye-witnesses, it will
be a clear infraction of Section 386 Cr.P.C. In Biswanath Ghosh v. State of
West Bengal & Ors. AIR 1987 SC 1155 it was held that where the High
Court acquitted the accused in appeal against conviction without waiting for
arrival of records from the Sessions Court and without perusing evidence
adduced by prosecution, there was a flagrant mis-carriage of justice and the
order of acquittal was liable to be set aside. It was further held that the fact
that the Public Prosecutor conceded that there was no evidence, was not
enough and the High Court had to satisfy itself upon perusal of the records
that there was no reliable and credible evidence to warrant the conviction of
the accused. In State of UP v. Sahai & Ors. AIR 1981 SC 1442 it was
observed that where the High Court has not cared to examine the details of
the intrinsic merits of the evidence of the eye-witnesses and has rejected
their evidence on the general grounds, the order of acquittal passed by the
High Court resulted in a gross and substantial mis-carriage of justice so as to
invoke extra-ordinary jurisdiction of Supreme Court under Article 136 of the
Constitution.
In the present case, the incident took place at about 7.00 p.m. on
23.5.1987. On 23rd May the sun sets fairly late and there is good light at
7.00 p.m. and as such the witnesses must have seen and identified the
assailants who were all residents of the same village Chatha Sekhwan and
were very well known to them. The three eye-witnesses examined by the
prosecution, namely, PW4 Amar Singh, PW7 Bhan Singh and PW8
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Gurbachan Singh are injured witnesses and, therefore, no doubt can be
raised about their presence on the spot. They have given a consistent
version that A-1 and A-2 were armed with SBBL guns and A-3 and A-4
were armed with DBBL guns and that all the accused fired from their
respective weapons causing injuries to them and also to Kashmira Singh,
Pritam Singh and the deceased Lakha Singh. Thus, the evidence on record
fully establishes the case of the prosecution.
The main reason given by the High Court for disbelieving the
prosecution case is that though the incident took place at 7.00 p.m. on
23.5.1987 but the FIR was recorded at 9.20 p.m. on 24.5.1987 at the Police
Station and the Special Report reached the Magistrate at 11.45 p.m. and as
the distance of the Police Station Sangrur from the place of occurrence is
only 4 kilometers, there was inordinate delay in lodging the FIR which
rendered the prosecution case doubtful. In our opinion, in the facts and
circumstances of the case the view taken by the High Court that there was
inordinate delay in lodging the FIR is not correct. In the incident in
question, besides the first informant Amar Singh, his three sons, namely,
Lakha Singh, Bhan Singh and Gurbachan Singh and two others Kashmira
Singh and Pritam Singh had received injuries. The condition of Lakha
Singh was serious as he had received injuries on his chest, neck and brain
and the injuries received by Bhan Singh were also grievous and dangerous
to life. Naturally, the first anxiety of the injured would have been to rush to
the hospital to get immediate medical aid and to save their life. PW4 has
stated that Sangrur is 7-8 Kilometers from his village and he reached the bus
stand, there at about 9.00 p.m. on the tractor of Major Singh and from there
he hired two taxies for going to Ludhiana. He reached Ludhiana which is
60 kilometers from Sangrur at about 11.00 p.m. and all the injured were
admitted in the hospital at about 11.30 p.m. Though medical aid was
provided to his son Lakha Singh, but he died at about 8.00 a.m. on
24.5.1987. The condition of his another son PW7 Bhan Singh was also
serious. PW1 Dr. William F. Masih has stated that injuries no.4 and 5 of
Bhan Singh were dangerous to life. His statement also shows that Bhan
Singh was operated upon and ultimately he was discharged from the hospital
on 8.6.1987. The record shows that some information was sent from CMC
hospital to Police Division No.3 in Ludhiana, which is at a distance of about
3 kilometers after the death of Lakha Singh in the morning of 24.5.1987.
Thereafter, a wireless message was sent to Police Station Sangrur. Sardara
Singh, SI then proceeded from Sangrur for Ludhiana at about 10.30 a.m. and
after reaching the hospital, he moved an application before the EMO, CMC
hospital, requesting that it may be informed whether statement of the
witnesses can be recorded. Dr. Koshi George then gave in writing that
Amar Singh was in fit condition to give his statement. It was thereafter that
PW14 Sardara Singh, S.I., recorded the statement of Amar Singh at about
5.30 p.m. This statement in writing was sent to PS Sangrur through
Constable Joga Singh on the basis of which PW17 Om Prakash, SHO,
Kotwali Sangrur, recorded the FIR, Exh. PJ/2 at 9.20 p.m. on 24.5.1987.
The High Court merely said that as the place of occurrence is only 4
kilometers from the Police Station and the FIR was lodged after 26 hours,
the delay in lodging thereof has rendered the prosecution case doubtful.
The sequence of events and the manner in which the FIR was lodged have
not at all been taken into consideration. It is quite likely that Amar Singh
was too shocked to think about the lodging of the FIR. His only anxiety
must have been to anyhow rush to the hospital to save the lives of his sons.
It is noteworthy that he did not go to any nearby dispensary or an ordinary
hospital, but went to a good medical college hospital, which was at Ludhiana
to get the best possible treatment. In the night he and his other relations
must have been too involved in looking after the injured persons, some of
whom were fighting for their life. Time must have been taken by both
PW14 Sardara Singh, SI to reach Ludhiana from Sangrur and thereafter by
Joga Singh, Constable in carrying the statement of Amar Singh from CMC
Ludhiana to PS Sangrur. In these circumstances, there was hardly any delay
in lodging of the FIR at the Police Station. The Special Report of the
occurrence was sent to CJM, Sangrur within two hours and 20 minutes of
the lodging of the FIR. The Special Report was, therefore, sent very
promptly and it cannot be said by any stretch of imagination that there was
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any delay in sending the same.
The High Court has went to the extent of observing that the delay of
26 hours in sending the Special Report by itself was enough to allow the
appeal and to set aside the conviction of the accused. In our opinion, the
period which elapsed in lodging the FIR of the incident has been fully
explained from the evidence on record and no adverse inference can be
drawn against the prosecution merely on the ground that the FIR was lodged
at 9.20 p.m. on the next day. There is no hard and fast rule that any delay
in lodging the FIR would automatically render the prosecution case doubtful.
It necessarily depends upon facts and circumstances of each case whether
there has been any such delay in lodging the FIR which may cast doubt
about the veracity of the prosecution case and for this a host of
circumstances like the condition of the first informant, the nature of injuries
sustained, the number of victims, the efforts made to provide medical aid to
them, the distance of the hospital and the police station, etc. have to be taken
into consideration. There is no mathematical formula by which an inference
may be drawn either way merely on account of delay in lodging of the FIR.
In this connection it will be useful to take note of the following observation
made by this Court in Tara Singh & Ors. v. State of Punjab, AIR 1991 SC
63 :
"The delay in giving the FIR by itself cannot be a
ground to doubt the prosecution case. Knowing the Indian
conditions as they are, one cannot expect these villagers to
rush to the police station immediately after the occurrence.
Human nature as it is, the kith and kin who have witnessed the
occurrence cannot be expected to act mechanically with all the
promptitude in giving the report to the police. At times being
grief-stricken because of the calamity it may not immediately
occur to them that they should give a report. After all it is but
natural in these circumstances for them to take some time to go
the police station for giving the report. Of course, in cases
arising out of acute factions there is a tendency to implicate
persons belonging to the opposite faction falsely. In order to
avert the danger of convicting such innocent persons the
Courts should be cautious to scrutinise the evidence of such
interested witnesses with greater care and caution and separate
grain from the chaff after subjecting the evidence to a closer
scrutiny and in doing so the contents of the FIR also will have
to be scrutinised carefully. However, unless there are
indications of fabrication, the Court cannot reject the
prosecution version as given in the FIR and later substantiated
by the evidence merely on the ground of delay. These are all
matters for appreciation and much depends on the facts and
circumstances of each case."
In Zahoor & Ors. v. State of U.P., AIR 1991 SC 40, it was held that
mere delay by itself is not enough to reject the prosecution case unless there
are clear indications of fabrication. This was reiterated in Jamna & Ors. v.
State of Uttar Pradesh, AIR 1994 SC 79 (para 4) that delay by itself is not a
circumstance to doubt the prosecution case. In the present case the High
Court did not at all take into consideration the fact that the first informant
Amar Singh and his three sons besides two others had received injuries and
they had first gone to Sangrur from their village on a tractor trolley and from
there to CMC, Ludhiana on taxies which is about 60 kilometers and further
that all the six injured had been admitted in the hospital where one of them
died next morning and another, namely, PW7, Bhan Singh had sustained
serious injuries which were dangerous to life and he had to be operated upon
and in such circumstances he could not have left the hospital for going to PS
Sangrur for lodging the FIR. The High Court also failed to take into
consideration the fact that the FIR was lodged after PW 14 Sardara Singh,
S.I. of Police Station Sangrur had come to the hospital and had recorded the
statement of Amar Singh after seeking opinion of the Doctor in writing and
thereafter, the said statement was sent through Constable Joga Singh to the
Police Station Sangrur. We are, therefore, clearly of the opinion that in the
facts and circumstances of the case there was no delay in either lodging of
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the FIR or in sending the Special Report to the CJM and the view to the
contrary taken by the High Court is absolutely incorrect.
The High Court has also held that the details about the occurrence
were not mentioned in the inquest report which showed that the investigating
officer was not sure of the facts when the inquest report was prepared and
this feature of the case carried weight in favour of the accused. We are
unable to accept this reasoning of the High Court. The provision for
holding of an inquest and preparing an inquest report is contained in Section
174 Cr.P.C. The heading of the Section is "Police to enquire and report
on suicide, etc." Sub-section (1) of this Section provides that when the
officer in charge of a police station or some other police officer specially
empowered by the State Government in that behalf receives information that
a person has committed suicide, or has been killed by another or by an
animal or by machinery or by an accident, or has died under circumstances
raising a reasonable suspicion that some other person has committed an
offence, he shall immediately give information to the nearest Executive
Magistrate and shall proceed to the place where the body of such deceased
person is, and there, in the presence of two or more respectable inhabitants
of the neighbourhood, shall make an investigation, and draw up a report of
the apparent cause of death describing such wounds, fractures, bruises, and
other marks of injury as may be found on the body and stating in what
manner, or by what weapon or instrument (if any), such marks appear to
have been inflicted. The requirement of the section is that the police
officer shall record the apparent cause of death describing the wounds as
may be found on the body and also the weapon or instrument by which they
appear to have been inflicted and this has to be done in the presence of two
or more respectable inhabitants of the neighbourhood. The Section does not
contemplate that the manner in which the incident took place or the names of
the accused should be mentioned in the inquest report. The basic purpose of
holding an inquest is to report regarding the apparent cause of death, namely
whether it is suicidal, homicidal, accidental or by some machinery, etc. The
scope and purpose of Section 174 Cr.P.C. was explained by this Court in
Podda Narayana & Ors. v. State of Andhra Pradesh AIR 1975 SC 1252 and
it will be useful to reproduce the same.
"The proceedings under Section 174 have a very limited
scope. The object of the proceedings is merely to ascertain
whether a person has died under suspicious circumstances or an
unnatural death and if so what is the apparent cause of the
death. The question regarding the details as to how the
deceased was assaulted or who assaulted him or under what
circumstances he was assaulted is foreign to the ambit and
scope of the proceedings under Section 174. Neither in
practice nor in law was it necessary for the police to mention
those details in the inquest report.
It is therefore not necessary to enter all the details of the
overt acts in the inquest report. Their omission is not sufficient
to put the prosecution out of Court."
In Khujji alias Surendra Tiwari v. State of Madhya Pradesh AIR 1991
SC 1853 (para 8), this Court, after placing reliance upon the above quoted
decision, rejected the contention raised on behalf of the accused that the
evidence of eye-witnesses could not be relied upon as their names did not
figure in the inquest report prepared at the earliest point of time. In Shakila
Khadar v. Nausher Gama & Anr. AIR 1975 SC 1324 (para 5), it was held
that an inquest under Section 174 Cr.P.C. is concerned with establishing the
cause of the death only. The High Court was, therefore, clearly in error in
holding that as the facts about the occurrence were not mentioned in the
inquest report, it would show that at least by the time the report was
prepared the investigating officer was not sure of the facts of the case.
The third and the last reasoning given by the High Court in acquitting
the accused is that the investigation of the case was tainted and for coming
to this conclusion three circumstances have been taken into account. The
first circumstance is that PW17 Om Prakash, Inspector, Police Station
Sangrur did not take into possession the wire gauze of the window of the
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Baithak of Gurdial Singh from where A-1 is alleged to have fired his gun.
The second circumstance is that the investigating officer did not send the fire
arms and the empties recovered from the spot for comparison to the Forensic
Science Laboratory and the third is that in the Daily Diary Register (DDR),
the names of the witnesses, weapons of offence and the place of occurrence
were not mentioned.
Coming to the last point regarding certain omissions in the DDR, it
has come in evidence that on the basis of the statement of PW4 Amar Singh,
which was recorded by PW14 Sardara Singh, S.I. in the hospital a formal
FIR was recorded at the Police Station at 9.20 p.m. In accordance with
Section 155 Cr.P.C. the contents of the FIR were also entered in the DDR,
which contained the names of the witnesses, weapons of offence and place
of occurrence and it was not very necessary to mention them separately all
over again. It is not the case of the defence that the names of the accused
were not mentioned in the DDR. We fail to understand as to how it was
necessary for the investigation officer to take in his possession the wire
gauze of the window from where A-1 is alleged to have fired. The wire
gauze had absolutely no bearing on the prosecution case and the
investigating officer was not supposed to cut and take out the same from the
window where it was fixed. It would have been certainly better if the
investigating agency had sent the fire arms and the empties to the Forensic
Science Laboratory for comparison. However, the report of the Ballistic
Expert would in any case be in the nature of an expert opinion and the same
is not conclusive. The failure of the investigating officer in sending the fire
arms and the empties for comparison cannot completely throw out the
prosecution case when the same is fully established from the testimony of
eye-witnesses whose presence on the spot cannot be doubted as they all
received gun shot injuries in the incident. In Karnel Singh v. State of M.P.
(1995) 5 SCC 518 it was held that in cases of defective investigation the
court has to be circumspect in evaluating the evidence but it would not be
right in acquitting an accused person solely on account of the defect and to
do so would tantamount to playing into the hands of the investigating officer
if the investigation is designedly defective. In Paras Yadav & Ors. v. State
of Bihar (1999) 2 SCC 126 while commenting upon certain omissions of the
investigating agency, it was held that it may be that such lapse is committed
designedly or because of negligence and hence the prosecution evidence is
required to be examined de hors such omissions to find out whether the said
evidence is reliable or not. Similar view was taken in Ram Bihari Yadav v.
State of Bihar (1998) 4 SCC 517 when this Court observed that in such cases
the story of the prosecution will have to be examined de hors such omissions
and contaminated conduct of the officials, otherwise, the mischief which
was deliberately done would be perpetuated and justice would be denied to
the complainant party and this would obviously shake the confidence of the
people not merely in the law enforcing agency but also in the administration
of justice. In our opinion the circumstances relied upon by the High Court
in holding that the investigation was tainted are not of any substance on
which such an inference could be drawn and in a case like the present one
where the prosecution case is fully established by the direct testimony of the
eye-witnesses, which is corroborated by the medical evidence, any failure or
omission of the investigating officer cannot render the prosecution case
doubtful or unworthy of belief.
Another reason given by the High Court for acquitting the accused-
respondents is that two other injured witnesses, namely, Kashmira Singh and
Pritam Singh and one Ramesh, whose name was mentioned in the FIR, were
not examined. Shri Ashwani Kumar, learned senior counsel appearing for
the accused-respondents has vehemently urged that the purpose of a criminal
trial is not to support the prosecution theory but to investigate the offence
and to determine the guilt or innocence of the accused and the duty of the
public prosecutor is to represent the administration of justice and therefore
the testimony of all the available eye witnesses should be before the Court
and in support of this contention he has placed reliance on State of U.P. &
Anr. v. Jaggo alias Jagdish & Ors. AIR 1971 SC 1586. It is true that the
witnesses essential to the unfolding of the narrative on which the prosecution
is based must be called by the prosecution, whether effect of their testimony
is for or against the case of the prosecution. However, that does not mean
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that everyone who has witnessed the occurrence, whatever their number be,
must be examined as a witness. The prosecution in the present case had
examined three eye-witnesses who were all injured witnesses. The mere
fact that Kashmira Singh and Pritam Singh were not examined cannot lead
to an inference that the prosecution case was not correct. The aforesaid two
witnesses had been given up by the prosecution on the ground that they had
been won over by the accused. These two persons are not family members
of the first informant Amar Singh and it is quite likely that they did not want
to get involved in any dispute between the first informant and his sons on the
one hand and the accused on the other hand as they had no interest in the
land belonging to Jangir Dass Sadh which was being earlier cultivated by
Gurdial Singh, father of A-1 and A-2 but had been taken an year earlier by
the first informant Amar Singh. The contention raised by learned counsel
fails to take notice of Section 134 of the Evidence Act which provides that
no particular number of witnesses shall in any case be required for the proof
of any fact. A similar contention has been repelled by this Court in a very
illustrating judgment in Vadivelu Thevar v. State of Madras AIR 1957 SC
614 and it will be useful to take note of para 11 of the report, which reads as
under :
".The contention that in a murder case, the court
should insist upon plurality of witnesses, is much too broadly
stated. The Indian Legislature has not insisted on laying down
any such exceptions to the general rule recognised in S.134,
which by laying down that "no particular number of witnesses
shall, in any case, be required for the proof of any fact" has
enshrined the well recognised maxim that "Evidence has to be
weighed and not counted." It is not seldom that a crime has
been committed in the presence of only one witness, leaving
aside those cases which are not of uncommon occurrence,
where determination of guilt depends entirely on circumstantial
evidence. If the Legislature were to insist upon plurality of
witnesses, cases where the testimony of a single witness only
could be available in proof of the crime, would go unpunished.
."
The above quoted principle was laid reiterated in Ramratan & Ors. v.
State of Rajasthan AIR 1962 SC 424.
The prosecution having examined three eye-witnesses, in our opinion,
there was no necessity of multiplying the number of witnesses and no
adverse inference could be drawn against the prosecution merely on the
ground that Kashmira Singh or Pritam Singh were not examined. If the
incident had not taken place as suggested by the prosecution but had
happened in a different manner, there was no impediment in the way of the
accused-respondents to examine the aforesaid persons as defence witnesses,
but they did not chose to do so.
Having given our careful consideration to the submissions made by
learned counsel for the parties, we are of the opinion that the judgment and
order of the High Court is wholly perverse and illegal inasmuch as it
completely failed to consider the testimony of the eye-witnesses and the
reasons given for discarding the prosecution case are also unsustainable in
law.
In the result, the appeal succeeds and is hereby allowed. The
judgment and order dated 26.9.1991 of the High Court is set aside and that
of the learned Additional Sessions Judge, Sangrur is restored. The
accused-respondents shall surrender forthwith to undergo the sentences
imposed upon them by the learned Additional Sessions Judge. The Chief
Judicial Magistrate, Sangrur shall take immediate steps to take the accused-
respondents in custody and for realisation of fine.