Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
JAI DEV
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF PUNJAB(And Connected Appeal)
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
30/07/1962
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
CITATION:
1963 AIR 612 1962 SCR (3) 489
CITATOR INFO :
R 1968 SC 702 (19)
R 1975 SC1674 (18)
ACT:
Criminal Law--Murder--Self-defence-Scope--Threat to
possession of land--Indian Penal Code (Act 45 of 1860). ss.
99, 100--Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 (Act 5 of 1898),
s.342.
HEADNOTE:
The appellants along with four others were charged with
having committed offences under s. 148 and ss. 202 and 326,
read with s. 149, of the Indian Penal Code. The incident
which gave rise to the present criminal proceedings related
to a cultivable field in respect of which a dispute arose as
to its possession between the appellants and the faction of
the complainants. On September 14, 1960, a rioting took
place in the field which resulted in the death of six
persons and injuries to nine persons. The appellant’s case
was that they were in possessions of the field and were
cultivating it at the time of the incident whereas the
prosecution contended that the complainant’s party was in
possession and that the appellants virtually invaded it and
caused a massacre. The High Court found that the crop in
the field had been ploughed by the appellants and their
companions and that when the operations were being carried
on by them on the day of rioting, the villagers, who did not
tolerate the strangers, came to the field armed with weapons
to take forcible Possession of the field, that as soon as
fire-arms were used for the first time killing a person, the
villagers started running away and that after all the
villagers had run away, the appellants used their rifles
against their respective victims when the latter were
standing at a considerable distance from them. The High
Court took the view that as at the relevant time the
property had been saved from the trespass, there was no
justification for using any force against the running
villagers and so, the appellants who were proved to have
caused the deaths of the victims could not claim protection
of the right of private defence and were guilty of the
offence of murder under s 302.
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Held, that the appellants were rightly convicted under s.302
of the Indian Penal Code on the findings given by the High
Court.
490
In exercising the right of private defence, the force which
a person defending himself or his property is entitled to
use must not be unduly disproportionate to the injury which
is to be averted or which is reasonably apprehended and
should not exceed its legitimate purpose. The use of the
force must be stopped as soon as the threat has disappeared.
The exercise of the right of private defence must never be
vindictive or malicious,
In exercising its powers under s. 342 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure the Court must take care to put all the
relevant circumstances appearing in the evidence to the
accused, so that he might get an opportunity, to say what he
wanted to do so in respect of the prosecution case against
him, but it is not necessary that the Court should put to
the accused detailed questions which may amount to his
cross. examination.
Held, that the failure to put the specific point of the
distance from which the appellants used their rifles, under
s. 342 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, did not vitiate
the trial or affect the conclusion of the High Court.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeals Nos. 56
and 57 of 1962.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment and order dated
October 4, 1961, of the Punjab High Court in Criminal
Appeals Nos. 635 and 636 of 1961 and Murder Reference No. 59
of 1961.
Frank Anthony, Ghanshiam and P.C. Aggarwala for the
appellants.
N.S. Bindra, Kartar Singh, Assistant Advocate General for
the State of Punjab and P. D. Menon, for the respondents.
1962. July 30. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
GAJENDRAGADKAR, J.-The two appellants Jai Dev and Hari Singh
along with four others Yudhbir Singh, Dhanpat Singh, Sajjan
Singh and Parbhati were charged with having committed
offences under s.148 and ss-302 and 326 both read with s.149
of the
491
Indian Penal Code. The case against them was that on
September 14, 1960, they formed themselves into an unlawful
assembly in the area of Dhani Khord and that the common
object of this unlawful assembly was to commit the offence
of rioting while armed with deadly weapons and that in
pursuance of the said common object the offence of rioting
was committed. That is how the charge under s. 148 was
framed. The prosecution further alleged that on the same
day and at the same time and place, while the accused
persons were members of an unlawful assembly, they had
another common object of committing the murders of Hukma,
Jai Narain, Jai Dev, Amin Lal, Mst. Sagroli and Mst. Dil
Kaur and that in pursuance of the said common object, the
said persons were murdered. Dhanpat Singh killed Hukma,
Sajjan Singh attacked Hukma, Yudhbir Singh shot at Amin Lal,
Jai Dev shot at Mst. Sagroli and victim Jaidev, and Hari
Singh shot at Jai Narain and Parbhati killed Mst. Dil Kaur.
It is the murder of these six victims which gave rise to the
charge against the six accused persons under s. 302/149 of
the Indian. Penal Code. An assault made by the members of
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the said assembly on Rama Chander, Jug Lal, Mst. Chan Kaur,
Sirya, Murti and Murli gave rise to a similar charge under
s. 326/149. At the same trial along with these six persons,
Basti Ram was tried on the charge that he had abetted the
commission of the offence of murder by the members of the
unlawful assembly and thus rendered himself liable to be
punished under s. 302/109 of the Indian Penal Code. The
case against these seven accused persons was tried by the
learned Addl. Sessions Judge, Gurgaon. He held that the
charges against Parbhati and Basti Ram had not been proved
beyond a reasonable doubte ; so, he acquitted both the said
accused persons. In respect of the remaining five accused
persons, the learned Judge held that all the three
492
charges framed against them had been proved, beyond a
reasonable doubt. For the offence of murder, the learned
Judge directed that all the five should be hanged; for the
offence under s. 326/149 he sentenced each one of them two
years rigorous imprisonment and for the offence under is.
148 he sentenced each one to suffer R. I. for one year.
These two latter sentences were ordered to run concurrently
and that too if the death penalty imposed on them was not
confirmed by the High Court.
Against this order of conviction and sentence, three appeals
were prefered on behalf of the five condemned persons. The
sentences of death imposed on them were also submitted for
confirmation. The Punjab High Court dealt with the
confirmation proceedings and the three appeals together and
held that the conviction of Yudhbir Singh, Dhanpat Singh and
Sajjan Singh was not justified and so, the said order of
conviction was set aside and consequently, they were ordered
to be acquitted and discharged. In regard to Jai Dev and
Hari Singh the High Court differed from the view taken by
the trial Court and held that they were guilty not under s.
302/149 but only under s. 302, of the Indian Penal Code. In
the result, the appeals preferred by them were dismissed and
their conviction for the offence of murder and the sentences
of death imposed on them were confirmed. It is this order
which is challenged by the two appellants before us in their
appeals Nos. 56 and 57 of 1962. These two appeals have
brought to this Court by special leave.
The incident which has given rise to the present criminal
proceedings occurred in Khosra No.388 in Mauza Ahrod known
as ’Inamwala field’ on September 14, 1960, at about 10.30
A.M. This incident has led to the death of six persons
already
493
mentioned as well as the death of Ram Pat who belonged to
the faction of the appellants. It has also resulted in
injuries to nine persons three of whom belonged to the side
of the appellants and six to the side of the complainants.
The incident itself was in a sense a tragic and gruesome
culmination of the battle for possession of the land which
was waged between the appellants on the one hand and the
faction of the complainants on the other. One of the
principal points which fell to be considered in the courts
below was : who was in possession of the said field at the
material time ? The appellants pleaded that they were in
possession of the field and were cultivating the field at
the time of the incident, whereas the prosecution contends
that the complainants’ party was in possession of the field
and the appellants virtually invaded the field and caused
this massacre.
The prosecution case is that between 9 and 10 A.M. on the
date of the offence, the appellants and, their brothers Ram
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Pat and Basti Ram came to the field with their tractor and
started ploughing the bajra crop which had been sown by the
villagers who were tenants in possession. Jug Lal, Amin
Lal, Ram Chander, Sunda, Jai Dev, Hukma and others
remonstrated with the appellants that the crops raised by
them should not be destroyed. Dhanpat Singh who was driving
the tractor was armed with pharsi while the appellants were
standing armed with rifles. Yudhbir Singh had a pistol.
Sajjan Singh and Parbhati had phars is and Ram Pat had a
bhalla. Thus all the appellants were armed with deadly
weapons and three of them had fire-arm. According to the
prosecution, the remonstrance made by Juglal and others did
not help and the appellants told them that they had got
possession of the land and that they would not permit any
interference in their ploughing operations. That invitably
led to an
494
altercation and an attempt was made to stop the working of
the tractor. This immediately led to the terrible souffle
which resulted in so many deaths. Sajjan Singh gave a
pharsi blow to Juglal whose left arm was touched.
Thereupon, Ram Pat raised his bhalla against Juglal causing
injuries to the latter on the left side of the abdomen and
on the right hand wrist. Hukma then snatched the bhalla
from the hands of Ram Pat and gave a blow to him in self-
defence. As a result, Ram Pat fell on the ground and died.
Sajjan Singh, Dhanpat Singh and Parbhati then gave blows to
Hukma with pharsis, Hukma fell on the ground unconscious.
At this stage, Amin Lal asked the appellants and their
friends not to kill people but the only result of this
intercession was that he was shot by the pistol of Yudhbir
Singh. Then everybody on the complaints; side started to
run away. Thereafter Jai Narain was shot dead by the appel-
lant Hari Singh. Dil Kaur was killed by Parbhati and
others, and victim Jai Dev and Met. Sagroli were shot dead
by the appellant Jai Dev. That, in substance, is the
prosecution case.
On the other hand, the defence was that all the accused
persons had gone to Inamwala field at about 8.30 A.M. on
September 14, 1960, and were engaged in the lawful act of
ploughing the land of which they had taken possession. They
had put the tractor on the portion of the bajra crop which
was ’kharaba’ with the object of using it for manure. After
this operation had gone on for nearly two hours, a large
number of residents of Dhani Sobha and Ahrod, including
women, came on the spot armed with deadly weapons and they
started abusing and assaulting the accused persons with the
weapons which they carried. The accused persons then used
jellies, kassi and lathi in self-defenoe. Amin Lal from the
complainants’ party was armed with a pistol which he aimed
at the accused persons,
495
Sajjan Singh then gave a lathi blow to Amin Lal and in
consequence, the pistol fell down on the ground from his
hands. It was then picked up by Yodhbir Singh and he used
it is retaliation against the assailants and fired five or
six rounds. Basti Ram who was charged with abetment of the
principal offences denied his presence, while the six other
accused persons admitted their presence on the spot and
pleaded self-defence.
The prosecution sought to prove its case by leading oral
evidence of the witnesses who were present at the scene and
some of whom had received injuries themselves. It also
relied on documentary evidence and the evidence of the
Investigating Officer. Soon after the incident, First
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Information Report was filed by the appellant Jai Dev in
which the version of the accused persons was set out and a
case was made out against the villagers. In fact, it was by
resson of this F.I.R. that the investigation originally
commenced. Subsequently, when it was discovered that on the
scene of the offence six persons on the complainants’ side
had been killed and six injured, information wag lodged
setting out the contrary version and that led to two cross-
proceedings. In one proceeding the members of the
complainants party were the accused, whereas in the other
proceeding the appellants and their companions were the
accused persons. since the trial ended in the conviction of
the appellants and their companions, the case made out in
the complaint filed by the appellant Jai Dev has been held
to be not proved.
At this stage, it would be convenient to refer very briefly
to the findings recorded by the trial Court and the
conclusions reached by the.High Court in appeal. The trial
Court found that the evidence adduced by the accused persons
in support of their case that they had obtained possession
of
496
the land before the date of the offence, was not
satisfactory and that the documents and the entries made in
the revenue papers were no more than paper entries and were
not "as good as they looked". According to the learned
trial Judge, the actual possession of the land all along
remained with the complaints’ party Jug Lal and his compa-
nions and that the crop standing at the spot at the time of
the incident had been sown by and belonged to the complaints
party. This finding necessarily meant that the ploughing of
the land by the accused persons was without any lawful
justification and constituted an act of trespass. The trial
Court accordingly held that the accused persons were the
aggressors and that the complainants! party in fact had a
right of private defence. That is how it came to the
conclusion that the six accused persons were members of an
unlawful assembly and had gone to the field in question
armed with deadly weapons with a common object of committing
the offences which were charged against them. Dealing with
the case on this basis, the trial Judge did not think it
necessary to enquire which of the victims had been killed
by which of the particular accused persons. As we have
already indicated, he was not satisfied that the charge had
been proved against Parbhati or against Basti Rama; but in
regard to the remaining five persons, he held that the
evidence conclusively established the charges under s. 148
and ss. 302 and 326/149. In dealing with the defence, the
trial Judge has categorically rejected the defence version
that Amin Lal was armed with a pistol and that after the
said pistol fell down from his hands it was picked up by
Yudhbir Singh. According to the trial Court, no one on the
complainants, side was armed with fire-arms, whereas three
persons on the side of the accused were armed with fire-
arms. Yudhbir Singh had a pistol and the appellants Jai Dev
and Hari Singh had rifles.
497
When the matter was argued before the High Court, the High
Court was not inclined to accept the finding of the trial
Court on the question of possession. In its judgment, the
High Court has referred in detail to the disputes which
preceded the commission of these offences in regard to the
possession of the land. It appears that this land was given
as a charitable gift by the proprietary body. ’of the
village Ahrod to one Baba Kanhar Dass many, years ago.
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Thereafter, it continued in the cultivation of Amin Lal, Jug
Lal, Charanji Lal and Duli Chand as tenants. Kanhar Dass
subsequently sold the entire piece of land to the appellants
and their brothers Basti Ram and Ram Pat on May 30, 1958,
for a sum of Rs.25,000/-. These purchasers belonged to the
village Kulana and so, the villagers of Ahrod treated them
as strangers and they were annoyed that the land which had
been gifted by the villagers to Kanbar Dass by way of a
charitable gift had been sold by him to strangers. In their
resentment, the proprietary body of Ahrod filed a
declaratory suit challenging the sale-deed soon after the
sale-deed was executed. When that sent failed, two pre-
emption suits were filed but they were also dismissed. The
appellants and their two brothers then filed a suit for
possession. In that suit a decree was passed and the
documentary evidence produced in the case shows that in
execution of the decree possession was delivered to the
decree-holders. It appears that some persons offered
resentence to the delivery of possession and 15 bighas of
land was claimed by the resisters. Litigation followed in
respect of that and whatever may be the position with regard
to those 15 bighas, &wording to the High Court, possession
of 56 bighas and 6 bighas of land was definitely delivered
over ’to Basti Ram and his brothers on December 23, 1959.
In other words, reversing the finding of the trial Court on
this point, the High Court came to the conclusion that the
field where the offences
498
took place was in the possession of the appellants and their
companions.
The High Court has also found that the crop in the field had
been ploughed by the appellants and their companions and
that the operations which were carried on by them on the
morning of September 14. 1960, did not constitute trespass
in any sense. On the evidence, the High Court has come to
the conclusion that the villagers who did Dot tolerate that
the strangers should take possession of the land had come
to the filed to take possession and they were armed. It
appears that the number of villagers was much larger than
the number of persons on the side of the accused party,
though the weapons carried by the latter included fire-arms
and so, the latter party had superiority, in arms. The High
Court has, therefore, come to the conclusion that the party
of the accused persons was entitled to exercise its right of
private defence. The property of which they were in
possession was threatened by persons who were ’armed with
weapons and so, the right to defend their property against
an assault whih threatened grievous hurt, if not death, gave
them the right to use force even the extent of causing death
to the assailants. It is substantially as a result of this
finding that the High Court took the view that Sajjan Singh,
Yudhbir Singh and Dhanpat Singh who were responsible for the
death of the three of the victims were not guilty of any
offence. In the circumstances, they were entitled to defend
their property against assailants, who threatened them with
death, even by causing their death. That is how these three
accused persons have been acquitted in appeal. In regard to
the appellants Jai Dev and Hari Singh, the High Court has
held that at the time when these two appellants caused the
deaths of Jai Dev and Jai Narain respectively, there was no
apprehension of any danger at all.
499
As soon as Amin Lal was shot dead, all the villagers who had
come to the field ran away and there was no longer any
justification whatever for using any force against the
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running villagers. Since at the relevant time the property
had been saved form the trespass and the assailants bad been
completely dispersed, the right of private defence ceased to
exist and so, the appellants who were proved to have caused
the two deaths could not claim protection either of the
right of private defence or could not even plead that they
had merely exceeded the right of private defence; so, they
are guilty of the offence of murder under s. 302. That is
how the appellants have been convicted of the said offence
and have been ordered to be hanged.
The question which the appeal raises for our decision thus
lies within a very narrow compass. The findings of fact
recorded by the High Court in favour of the appellants would
be accepted as binding on the parties for the purpose of
this appeal. In other words, we would deal with the case of
the appellants on the basis that initially they and their
companions had the right of private defence. Mr. Anthony
contends that having regard to the circu. mstances under
which the appellants fired from their rifles, it would be
erroneous to hold that the right of private defence had come
to an end, According to him, allowance must be made in
favour of the appellants in determining the issue. because
it is now found that they were faced with an angry mob whose
members were armed with weapons and who appeared determined
to dispossess the appellants and their friends of the field
in question. The decision of the point thus raised by Mr.
Anthony would substantially depend upon the scope and effect
of the provisions of s. 100 of the Indian Penal Code.
Section 100 provides, inter alia, that the right of private
defence of the body extends under the
500
restrictions mentioned in s. 99, to the voluntary causing of
death if the offence which occasions the exercise of the
right be an assault as may reasonably cause the apprehension
that grievous hurt will otherwise be the consequence of such
assault. In other words, if the person claiming the right
of private defence has to face assailants who can be
reasonably apprehended to cause grievous hurt to him, it
would be open to him to defend himself by causing the death
of the assailant.
In appreciating the validity of the appellants’ argument, it
would be necessary to recall the basic assumptions
underlying the law of self-defence, In a well-ordered
civilised society it is generally assumed that the State
would take care of the persons and properties of individual
citizens and that normally it is the function of the State
to afford protection to such persons and their properties.
This, however, does not mean that a person suddenly called
upon to face an assault must run away and thus protect
himself, He is entitled to resist the attack and defend
himself. The same is the position if he has to meet an
attack on his property, In other words, where an individual
citizen or his property is faced with a danger and immediate
aid from the State machinery is not readily available, the
individual citizen is entitled to protect himself and his
property. That being so, it is a. necessary corollary to
the doctrine’ of private defence that the violence which the
citizen predefending himself or his property is entitled to
use must not be unduly disproportionate to the injury which
is to be averted or which is reasonably prehended and should
not exceed its legitimate purpose. The exercise of the
right of private defence must never be vindictive or
malicious.
There can be no doubt that in judging the conduct of a
person who proves that he had a right of
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501
private defence, allowance has necessarily to be made for
his feelings at the relevant time. Ile is faced with an
assault which causes a reasonable apprehension of death or
grievous hurt and that inevitably creates in his mind some
excitement and confusion. At such a moment, the uppermost
feeling in his mind would be toward off the danger and to
save himself or his property, and so, he would naturally be
anxious to strike a decisive blow in exercise of his right.
It is no doubt true that in striking a decisive blow, he
must not use more force than appears to be reasonably
necessary. But in dealing with the question as to whether
more force is used than is necessary or than was justified
by the prevailing circumstances, it would be inappro, priate
to adopt tests of detached objectivity which would be so
natural in a court room, for instance, long after the
incident has taken place. That is why in some judicial
decisions it has been observed that the means which a
threatened person adopts of the force which be uses should
not be weighed in golden scales. To begin with, the person
exercising a right of private defence must consider whether
the threat to his person or his property is real and
immediate. If he reaches the conclusion reasonably that the
threat is immediate and real, he is entitled to exercise his
right. In the exercise of his right, he must use force
necessary for the purpose and he must stop using the force
as soon as the threat has disappeared. So long as the
threat lasts and the right of private defence can be
legitimately exercised, it would not be fair to require, as
Mayne has observed, that "he should modulate his defence
step by step. according to the attack, before there is
reason to believe the attack is over" (1). The law of
private defence does not require that the person assaulted
or facing an apprehension of an assault must run away for
safety. It entitles him to defend himself and law gives him
the right to
(1) Mayne s Criminal law of Indians 4th Ed.P.23.1
502
secure his victory over his assailant by using the necessary
force. This necessarily postulates that as soon as the
cause for the reasonable apprehension has disappeared and
the threat has either been destroyed or has been put to
rout, there can be no occasion to exercise the right of
private defence. If the danger is continuing, the right is
there; if the danger or the apprehension about it has ceased
to exist, there is no longer the right of private defence,
(vide ss. 102 and 105 of the Indian Penal Code). This
position cannot be and has not been disputed before us and
so, the narrow question which we must proceed to examine is
whether in the light of this legal position, the appellants
could be said, to have had a right of private defence at the
time when the appellant Jai Dev fired at the victim Jai Dev
and the appllant Hari Singh fired at the victim Jai Narain.
In dealing with this question, the most significant
circumstance against the appellants is that both the victims
were at a long distance from appellants when they were shot
dead. We will take the case of victim Jai Dev first.
According to Gurbux Singh (P. W. 37), Assistant Sub-
Inspector, the dead body of Jai Dev was found at a distance
of 70 paces from the place of the tractor, but it was
discovered that it had been dragged from a place at a longer
distance where Jai Dev stood when he was fired dead. From
that place to the place where his dead holy was actually
found there was a trail of blood which unambiguously showed
that Jai Dev fell down at a more distant place and that he
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was dragged nearer the scene of the offence after he fell
down. This statement is corroborated by the memo prepared
on September 14, 1960 (item No. 104). Blood-stained earth
was taken from both these spots. Roughly stated, the spot
where Jai Dev was shot at can be said to be about 300 paces
away from the tractror where the appellant Jai Dev stood.
It is
503
true that Gurbux Singh made no express reference to the
trail of blood in rough site plan which he had prepared on
the day of the offence. But iten 8 in the plan, we were
told, does refer to the dragging and that is enough
corroboration to the evidence of Gurbux Singh. Besides, in
considering the effect of the omission to mention the trail
of blood in the rough plan, we cannot ignore the fact that
at that time Gurbux Singh’s mind was really concentrated on
the F. I. R. received by the Police from the appellant Jai
Dev himself and that means that at that time the impression
in the mind of Gurbux Singh must have been that the deceased
Jai Dev belonged to the party of the aggressors and so,
blood marks caused by the dragging of his body may not have
appeared to him to be of any significance. However that may
be, the sworn testimony of Gurbux Singh is corroborated by
the memo contemporaneously prepared and it would be idle to
suggest that this evidence should be disbelieved because the
rough site plan prepared by Gurbux Singh does not refer to
the trail of blood.
Mr. Anthony has, however, strongly relied on the statement
of Juglal (P. W. 13) who has narrated the incident as it
took place, and in that connection has stated that the
accused Jai Dev then opened fire from his rifle killing Jai
Dev deceased at the spot. It is suggested that the words
"at the spot" show that the victim Jai Dev was standing at
the spot when the appellant Jai Dev shot at him. We are not
inclined to accept this contention. What the witness
obviously meant was that from the spot where the appellant
Jai Dev was standing, he fired at the victim Jai Dev.
Besides, reading the account given by Juglal as a
504
whole, it would not be fair to treat the, words ’fat the
spot" in that technical way. Similarly, the. argument that
according to Jai Dev all the show, were fired almost
simultaneously, is also not wellfounded. When a witness
gives an account. off on incident like this, he is bound to,
refer to one event after another. That does not mean, that,
these two appellants and their companions fired almost
simultaneously. Therefore, we are not.- satisfied that the
evidence of Juglal supports the argument that the victim Jai
Dev was near the scene of the offence when the, appellant
Jai Dev fired at him,
Mr. Anthony has also relied on the statement of Chuni Lal
(P.W. 16), in support of the same argument. But it is clear
this witness was obviously making a mistake between the two
documents P.N.F. and P.N.E. A statement like this which is
the result of confusion cannot legitimately be pressed into
service for the purpose of showing that victim Jai Dev was
near about the scene of the offence. Then again, the
statement of Hira Lal (P.W. 5) on which Mr. Anthony relies
shows that in the committing Court he had said that Jai Dev
had been injured at the spot; but he has added that, he,,
had said so because subsequently after the occurrence,, he
saw the dead body of Jai Dev near the scene of the offence.
Therefore, in our opinion, having regard to the evidence on
the record, the High Court was right in coming to the
conclusion that Jai Dev deceased was standing at a fairly
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long distance from the scene of the offence when he was shot
at.
That takes us to the case of the victim JaiNarain. Jai
Narain was in fact not in the Inamwala field at all.
According to the prosecution, he was on the machan in the
adjoining field which he was cultivating and it was whilst
he was in his own field that the appellant Hari Singh fired
at him. The distance between
505
the appellant and the victim has been found to be about 400
paces. Now this conclusion is also supported by evidence on
the record. Jai Narain’s mother, Chand Kaur (P.W. 10) says
that she saw her son falling on the ground from the machan,
and that clearly means the machan in the field of which Jai
Narain was in possession. The position of this field is
shown in the rough plan and sketch prepared by the Sub-
Inspector (P.A.J.). The evidence of Hira Lal (P.W. 5)
supports the same conclusion, and Gurbux Singh swears to the
same fact. He says that the dead body of Jainarain was
found lying at a distance of more than 400 spaces from the
point where the tractor was said to be standing at the time
of the occurrence. That is the effect of the evidence of
Juglal (P. W. 13) also. Thus, there can be no doubt that
the victim Jainarain was at a long distance from the field
in question and like the appellant Jai Dev who took a clean
aim. at the victim Jai Dev who was standing a distance and
shot him dead, the appellant Hari Singh also took a clean
aim at the victim Jai Narain who was away from him and shot
him dead. That is the conclusion of the High Court and we
see no reason to interfere with it.
In the course of his arguments, Mr. Anthony relied on the
fact that some of the prosecution witnesses on whose
evidence the High Court has relied were not accepted by the
trial Court as truthful witnesses, and he contends that the
High Court should not have differed from the appreciation of
evidence recorded by the trial Court. There are two obvious
answers to this point. In the first place it is not wholly
accurate to say that the trial Court has completely
disbelieved the evidence given by the prosecution witnesses.
It may be conceded in favour of Mr. Anthony that in dealing
with a part of a prosecution case relating to Parbhati and
Basti Ram, the trial Court did not accept the evidence of
506
the witnesses which incriminated them, and in that
connection, he has referred to the criticism made by the
defence against those witnesses and has observed that there
is force in that criticism. But, while appreciating the
effect of the observations made by the trial Court in
dealing with that particular aspect of the matter, we cannot
lose sight of the fact that as to the actual occurrence the
trial Court, in substance, has believed the major part of
the prosecution evidence and has stated that the said
evidence is quite consistent with medical evidence. In
other words, the sequence of events, the part played by the
assailants as against the specific victims and the rest of
the prosecution story have, on the whole, been believed by
the trial Court. In this connection, we ought to add that
the trial Court did not feel called upon to consider the
individual case of each one of the accused persons because
it held that a charge under s. 149 had been proved. But
when the High Court came to a contrary conclusion on that
point, it became necessary for the High Court to examine the
case against each one of the accused persons before it, and
so, it would not be accurate to say that the High Court has
believed the witnesses whom the trial court had entirely
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disbelieved. That is the first answer to Mr. Anthony’s
contention. The second answer to the said contention is
that even if the trial Court had disbelieved the evidence,
it was open to the High Court, on a reconsideration of the
matter, to come to a contrary conclusion. It is true that
in dealing with oral evidence a Court of Appeal would
normally be reluctant to differ from the appreciation of
oral evidence by the trial Court, because obviously the
trial Court has the advantage of watching the demeanor of
the witnesses; but that is not to say that even in a proper
case, the Appeal Court cannot interfere with such
appreciation. Besides, the criticism made by the trial
Court is not so much in relation to the demeanour of the
witnesses as in
507
regard to their partisan character and the over. statements
which they made as partisan witnesses are generally apt to
do. Therefore, we see no justification for contending that
the finding of the High Court as to the distances at which
the Victims Jai Dev and Jai Narain were shot at should not
be accepted.
Mr. Anthony then argued that the fact that the victims were
at a long distance from the assailants when they were fired
at, will not really be decisive of the point which we are
called upon to consider in the present appeal. He contends
that if the assailants were surrounded by a very big mob
some of whom were armed with deadly weapons and all of whom
were determined to dispossess them at any cost, it was open
to the appellants and their companions to shoot at the mob
because they were themselves reasonably apprehensive of an
assault by the mob which would have led at least to grievous
hurt, if not death; and he argues that if three of the
assailants who had fire-arms fired almost
simultaneously,that would be within the legitimate exercise
of the right of private defence and the fact that somebody
was killed who was standing at a distance, would make no
difference in law. The argument thus presented is no doubt
prima facie attractive; but the assumption of fact on which
it is based is not justified in the circumstances of this
case. The High Court has found that at the time when the
appellants fired shots from their rifles, the villagers had
already started running away and there was no danger either
to the property or to the bodies of the assailants. In this
connection, it is important to remember that the defence
version that Amin Lal had a pistol had been rejected by both
the courts, so that whereas the crowd that threatened the
appellants and their friends was larger in number, the weap-
ons in the hands of the assailants were far more
508
powerful than the weapons in the hands of the crowd. Having
regard to the events that took place and the nature of the
assault as, it developed, it is clear that Amin Lal who was
one of the leaders of the villagers was shot dead and that,
according to the evidence, competely frightened the
villagers who began to run away helterskelter. Sunda (P.
W.4) has described how Amin Lal stepped forward for the help
of Hukma, but he was fired at from the pistol by Yudhbir
Singh, and having received a fatal injury on big chest Amin
Lal fell down dead on the ground. This witness adds "’the
members of the complainant party feeling frightened because
of the firing opened by Yudhbir Singh ran in the direction
of the village abadi". Similarly, the statement of Mst.
Sarian (P. W. 12) would seem to show that when the victim
Jai Dev was fired at, he had run away. On the
probabilities, it is very easy to believe that when the
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villagers found that the appellants and their friends were
inclined to use their firearms, they must have been
frightened, even the large number of the villagers would
have meant nothing. The large number would have merely
led to a large number of deaths that is about all.
Therefore, as soon as fire-arms were used for the first time
killing Amin Lal on the spot, the villagers must have run
away. That is the evidence given by some of the witnesses
and that is the conclusion of the High Court. It is in the
light of this conclusion that we have to deal with the point
raised by Mr. Anthony. If, at the time when the two
appellants used their rifles against their respective
victims standing at considerable distances from them, all
the villagers had run away, there was obviously no threat
continuing and so, the right of private defence bad clearly
and unambiguously come to an end. That is why
509
we think the High Court was right in holding that the
appellants were guilty of murder under s. 302 of the Indian
Penal code.
That leave two minor question to be considered. Mr. Anthony
has contended that the examination of the appellant Hari
Singh under s. 342 of the Code of Criminal Procedure has
been very defective in regard to the question of distance on
which the prosecution strongly relied against him before the
High Court, and he argues that this defect in the
examination of the appellant Hari Singh really vitiates the
trial. It is true that in asking him questions, the learned
trial Judge did not put the point of distance between him
and the victim Jai Narain clearly; but that in our opinion,
cannot by itself necessarily vitiage the trial or affect the
conclusion of the High Court. In dealing with this point,
we must have regard to all the questions put by the trial
Judge to the appellant. Besides, it is not so much the
point of distance by itself which goes against the appellant
Hari Singh as the conclusion that at the time when he fired
at Jai Narain, the threat had ceased; and if the threat had
ceased and there was no justification for using the
firearms., the appellant would be guilty of murder even if
Jai Narain was not far away from him. It is unnecessary to
emphasize that it is for the party pleading self-defence to
prove the circumstances giving rise to the exercise of the
right of self-defence, and this right cannot be said to be
proved as soon as we reach the conclusion that at the
relevant time there was no threat either to the person of
the appellant or the person or property of his companions.
In support of his contention that the failure to put the
relevant point against the appellant Hari Singh would affect
the final conclusion of the High Court, Mr. Anthony has
relied on a decision
510
of this Court in Hate Singh Bhagat Singh v. State of Madhya
Bharat (1). In that case, this Court has no doubt referred
to the fact that it was important to put to the accused each
material fact which is intended to be used against him and
to afford him a chance of explaining it if he can. But
these observations must be read in the light of the other
conclusions reached by this Court in that case. It would,
we think, be incorrect to suggest that these observations
are intended to lay down a general and inexorable rule that
wherever it is found that one of the point used against the
accused person has not been put to him, either the trial in
vitiated or his conviction is rendered bad. The examination
of the accused person under a. 342 is undoubtedly intended
to give him an opportunity to explain any circumstances
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appearing in the evidence against him. In exercising its
powers under s. 342, the Court must take care to put all
relevant circumstances appearing in the evidence to the
accused person. It would not be enough to put a few general
and broad questions to the accused, for by adopting such a
course the accused may not get opportunity of explaining all
the relevant circumstances. On the other hand, it would not
be fair or right that the Court should put to the accused
person detailed questions which may amount to his cross
examination. The ultimate test in determining whether or
not the amused has been fairly examined under a. 342 would
be to enquire whether, having regard to all the questions
put to him, he did get an opportunity to say what he wanted
to say in respect of prosecution case against him. If it
appears that the examination of the accused person was
defective and thereby a prejudice has been caused to him,
that would no doubt be a serious infirmity. It is obvious
that no general rule can be laid down in regard to the
manner in which
(1) A. I. R. 1953 S. C. 468.
511
the accused person should be examined under s. 342. Broadly
stated. however, the true position appears to be that
passion for brevity which may be content ’ with asking a few
omnibus general questions is as much inconsistent with the
requirements of s. 342 as anxiety for thoroughness which may
dictate an unduly detailed and large number of questions
which may amount to the cross-examination of the accused
person. Besides, in the present case. as we have already
shown, failure to put the specific point of distance is
really not very material.
The last argument which Mr. Anthony has urged before us is
that the prosecution should have examined a ballistic expert
in this case and since no expert has been examined, it
cannot be said that the projection has proved its case that
the appellants caused the deaths of the two victims by
shooting from the rifles which they carried. In support of
this argument, Mr. Anthony has referred us to the decision
of this Court in Mohinder Singh v. The State (1). In that
case. it has been observed by this Court that it has always
been considered to be duty of the prosecution, in a case
where death is due to injuries or wounds caused by a lethal
weapon, to prove by expert evidence that it was likely or at
least possible for the injuries to have been caused with the
weapon with which and in the manner in which they are
alleged to have been caused. We do not see bow this
principle can be invoked by Mr. Anthony in the present case.
The rifles which the appellants are alleged to have used
have not been recovered and so, there was no occasion to
examine any expert in respect of the injuries caused to the
two victims by the appellants. What Mr. Anthony suggests is
that an expert should have been examined for the purpose of
determining whether any of the injuries found on the persons
of the several victims could
(1) A. I. R. 1953 S. C. 415.
512
have been inflicted by the revolver which had been recovered
in this case. Now, the story about the recovery of this
revolver is very interesting. According to the defence,
Amin Lal was carrying a revolver and when he was hit with a
lathi by Sajjan Singh, the revolver fell down from his hands
and Yudhbir Singh picked it up and fired it at Amin Lal.
Now this revolver was carried away by Yudhbir Singh to his
house and he says that he produced the same before the
Polio’) Investigating Officer. On the other hand, according
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to Gurbux Singh, it was the accused Sajjan Singh who after
his arrest produced the pistol and two live cartridges
before him. It would thus appear that the revolver had been
produced by one of the accused persons on the allegation
that it was carried by Amin Lal and had been used by Yudhbir
Singh in self-defence after it had fallen down from Amin
Lal’s hands. It has not been the prosecution case that it
is this revolver which had been used by Yudhbir Singh. It
may well be that the revolver has been deliberately
surrendered by the accused in order to introduce
complications in the case. We think, in such a case it is
difficult to understand for what purpose the prosecution was
expected to examine the expert. Therefore, in our opinion,
the decision in the case of Mohinder Singh v. The State (1)
has no application to the case before us.
In the result, we agree with the High Court in holding that
the two appellants are guilty of murder under s. 302.
The only question which now remains to be considered is one
of sentence. Mr. Bindra for the State has left this
question to us since, presumably, he did not feel justified
in pressing for the imposition of the sentence of death.
We have carefully
(1) A. I. R. 1953 S. C. 415.
513
considered all the facts leading to the commission of this
offence and we are not inclined to accept the view of the
High Court that the circumstances of this case require the
imposition of the maximum penalty on the two offenders. On
the question of sentence, it would be relevant to take into
account the background of the incident, the nature and
extent of the threat held out by the crowd of villagers. the
excitement which must have been caused at the time of the
incident, and. so, though we have felt no difficulty in
agreeing with the decision of the High Court that at the
time when the two appellants fired shots from their rifles
the threat had ceased to exist, it would not be unreasonable
to take into account the fact that, the excitement in their
minds may have continued, and that, in the special
circumstances of this case, may be regarded as an
extenuating circumstance. We, therefore, think that the
ends of justice would be met if the sentence of death
imposed on the two appellants is set aside and instead, an
order is passed directing that they should suffer impri-
sonment for life. Accordingly, we confirm the conviction of
the appellants under s. 302 and convert the sentence of
death. imposed on them into one of imprisonment, for life.
Conviction confirmed. Sentence reduced.
514