Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 1250 of 1995
PETITIONER:
Nathu Singh Yadav
RESPONDENT:
State of Madhya Pradesh
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 22/11/2002
BENCH:
N.Santosh Hegde & B.P.Singh.
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
SANTOSH HEGDE,J.
The appellant and nine others were accused of having
committed the murder of one Maniram on 21.12.1983 at
about 10 a.m. in Usranhar, District Chhatarpur. The motive
alleged is one pertaining to the elections of the panchayat.
The prosecution case is that the appellant and the other
accused persons waylaid the deceased and on the
exhortation of the appellant, A-7 who was the son of the
appellant fired at the deceased with a Rifle and A-10 fired
with a 12 bore gun while the other 7 accused persons who
were carrying lathis were also present. Accordingly, they
were all charged for offences punishable under Section 302
read with Section 109 IPC and the appellant, A-7 and A-10
were charged under Section 30 of the Indian Arms Act.
The trial court acquitted the 7 accused persons who
were alleged to have been present with the lathis at the time
of their attack and convicted the appellant, A-7 and A-10 of
the offence punishable under Section 302 read with Section
109 IPC, and awarded life imprisonment and further
convicted them under Section 30 of the Indian Arms Act and
sentenced them to undergo RI for three months on that
count.
The three convicted accused including the appellant
preferred an appeal before the High Court of Madhya
Pradesh at Jabalpur. During the pendency of the appeal, A-7
died and the appeal stood abated against him. The High
Court on reconsideration of the evidence of record came to
the conclusion that the prosecution has not established the
participation of Sheo Pal Singh (A-7), even though,
according to the prosecution, he had fired from a 12 bore
gun, no pellet injuries were found on the body of the
deceased, hence, acquitted him. While in regard to the
appellant, even though it came to the conclusion that the
appellant did not cause any injury to the deceased, still on
the ground that the appellant had exhorted the other accused
persons to kill the deceased, convicted the appellant of an
offence punishable under Section 302 read with Section 109
IPC and imposed a sentence of life imprisonment. The High
Court also confirmed the sentence imposed on the appellant
under Section 30 of the Indian Arms Act on the ground he
had knowingly allowed the fire-arm belonging to him to be
used by A-7.
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We have heard the learned counsel for the parties and
perused the record. It is seen so far the 7 accused persons
who allegedly carried the lathis, both the courts below have
rejected the prosecution case which included the part of
exhortation by the appellant. So far as A-10 Sheo Pal
Singh’s participation which included firing from a 12 bore
gun is concerned, the High Court has disbelieved the same
holding that there was no pellet injury on the deceased.
Prosecution has not challenged this finding of the courts
below. So far as causing of injury by A-7 is concerned the
same has become final by the death of that accused. What is
now left for our consideration is the part played by the
appellant. On the facts of this appeal, we find it difficult to
believe this part of the prosecution case also which involves
the appellant, more so when the substantial part of
prosecution case is not accepted by the courts below. On the
facts of this case we find it difficult to separate the
prosecution case of the appellant from that of other acquitted
accused so as to base a conviction more so in view of the
fact appellant himself did not take part in the actual attack
on the deceased. This court in the case of Ugar Ahir & Ors.
Vs. The State of Bihar (AIR 1965 SC 277) has held :
"The maxim falsus in uno, falsus in
omnibus (false in one thing, false in every
thing) is neither a sound rule of law nor a
rule of practice. Hardly one comes across a
witness whose evidence does not contain a
grain of untruth or at any rate exaggerations,
embroiders or embellishments. It is,
therefore, the duty of the court to scrutinise
the evidence carefully and, in terms of the
felicitous metaphor, separate the grain from
the chaff. But, it cannot obviously disbelieve
the substratum of the prosecution case or the
material parts of the evidence and
reconstruct a story of its own out of the rest.
That is what the courts have done in this
case. In effect, the courts disbelieved
practically the whole version given by the
witnesses in regard to the pursuit, the assault
on the deceased with lathis, the accused
going on a bicycle, and the deceased
wresting the bhala from one of the
appellants and attacking with the same two
of the appellants, the case that the accused
attacked the witnesses, and the assertion of
the witnesses of their being disinterested
spectators. If all this was disbelieved, what
else remained ? To reverse the metaphor, the
courts removed the grain and accepted the
chaff and convicted the appellants. We,
therefore, set aside the conviction of the
appellants and the sentence passed on
them."
We think this precautionary principle laid down by
this Court in the above cited case applies aptly to the facts of
this case. We do not think it is safe to place reliance on the
evidence adduced by the prosecution in regard to the role
played by the appellant especially because the courts below
themselves have refused to place any reliance on the very
same evidence in regard to the role attributed to the other
accused persons who have been acquitted by the courts
below. Therefore, giving the benefit of doubt, we allow this
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appeal, set aside the conviction and sentence imposed on the
appellant. The bail bonds shall stand discharged.