Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
JADUNATH SINGH & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF U.P.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
07/12/1970
BENCH:
SIKRI, S.M.
BENCH:
SIKRI, S.M.
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA
DUA, I.D.
CITATION:
1971 AIR 363 1971 SCR (2) 917
1970 SCC (3) 918
CITATOR INFO :
F 1975 SC1814 (4)
ACT:
Evidence Act, 1872, s. 9--Identity of accused--Witnesses
claiming to have known accused from before--Accused denying
claim and requesting test identification-Refusal of test
identification whether vitiated trial.
HEADNOTE:
The appellants were accused of an offence under, s. 302 read
with s. 34 of the Indian Penal Code. Apart from P who was
injured in the incident there were, according to the
prosecution, two other eye-witnesses M and D who. knew the
appellants from before. The names of the appellants were
mentioned in the First Information Report but not their
parentage. The appellants, at the stage of inquiry, made an
application to the Additional District Magistrate (Judicial)
requesting that a test identification parade be held.
According to the appellants P knew them from before but not
the other two alleged eye-witnesses. The Magistrate
rejected the application on the ground that the charge sheet
had, already been filed. The same request made at the trial
stage to the Sessions Judge was again rejected on the ground
it was not bona fide. The trial court, believing the eye
witnesses, convicted the appellants. The High Court upheld
their conviction and did not accept their plea that the
trial had been vitiated because they had been denied a test
identification parade. In appeal to this Court by special
leave,
HELD: As laid down by this Court in Perkash
Chand Sogani’s case the absenceof test identification in all
cases is not fatal, andif the accused person is well-known
by sight it would be waste of time to put him up for
identification. But if there is any doubt in the matter the
prosecution should hold an identification parade specially
if an accused says that the alleged eyewitnesses did not
know him previously. It may be that there is no express
provision in the Code of Criminal Procedure enabling an
accused to insist on an identification parade but if the
accused’ does make an application and that application is
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turned down and it transpires during the course of the trial
that the witnesses did not know the accused previously, the
prosecution will, unless there is some evidence,, run the
risk of losing the case on this point. [924 G-925 C]
Perkash Chand Sogani- v. State of Rajasthan, Cr. A.No.
92/1956 dt. 15-1-1957, applied.
Sajjan Singh v. Emperor, A.I.R. 1945 Laj. 48, State of U.P.
v. Jagnoo, A.I.R. 1962 All. 333, In re Sangish, A.I.R. 1948
Mad. 113, Awadh Singh & Ors. v. Patna State, A.I.R. 1954 Pat
483, Provash Kumar Bose v. The King, A.I.R. 1951 Cal. 475,
Kanta Prasad v. Delhi Administration [1958] S.C.R. 1218.
1221, referred to.
In the present case it could be said about D that his
knowledge of the accused was very scant. The claim of the
other witness M that he had known the accused for about four
years was not challenged in crossexamination. Therefore on
the facts of the case the trial of the appellants.
918
Could not be held to be vitiated because of the denial of
test identification although the reason given by the
Magistrate for refusing it, namely, that the cbarge-sheet
had already been filed, was wrong. [925 G-926 C]
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 55 of
1970.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
September 26, 1969 of the Allahabad High Court in Criminal
Appeal No. 1037 of 1969 and Referred No. 82 of 1969.
Yogeshwar Prasad, S. K. Bagga and Sureshta Bagga, for the
appellants.
O. P. Rana, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by.
Sikri, J.-This appeal by special leave is directed against
the judgment of the High Court of Judicature at AllAhabad
confirming conviction of the two appellants by the Sessions
Judge, Mainpuri, under s. 302/34 of the Indian Panel Code.
Appellant Jadunath Singh was sentenced to death by the
Sessions Judge and appellant Girand Singh was sentenced to
undergo imprisonment for life.
In order to appreciate the points raised before us by the
learned counsel for the appellants it is necessary to state
a few facts. It is alleged against the appellants that on
February 26, 1968, at about 7.30 a.m., in furtherance of
their common intention, they murdered one Ram Swarup Pandey
by repeatedly stabbing him to death, when he was passing on
the Grand Trunk road in the town of Bewar to catch a truck.
As many as 34 injuries were found on the deceased at the
postmortem conducted on his body on the same day at about 3
p.m.
The prosecution case in brief is as follows : It is common
ground that there was great enmity between the deceased and
Laturi Ahir and his sons, the two appellants. The deceased
apprehended danger to his life from them, and on November
23, 1967, be sent an application to the Superintendent of
Police, Mainpuri, ;alleging that Laturi and his son,
Jadunath, Brahma, Panna Lal and Anokhey, et&. were
terrorising the weaker and poorer sections of the village
community and declaring openly that they would kill the
deceased to silence his opposition for ever. He prayed that
an enquiry may be made and suitable action taken against
them. (On February 25, 1968 ( the deceased came to Bewar in
the evening to meet the A.D.O. in connection with an
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enquiry on a complaint made against Munshi Lal Pradhan of
the village. He could not meet the A.D.O. as he was out of
station. He stayed during the
919
night with Prem Narain, P.W. 1, who happened to be a
brother-inlaw of his cousin Gulati Ram. According to Prem
Narain, both of them got up in the morning at 6.45 a.m. and
since it was Shivratri that day the deceased did not take
any food and they left for the bus stand at Bewar. When
they reached the bus-stand at about 7.10 a.m. they found
that the bus for Etah via Sultanganj had already left. The
next bus was due to go at 9.30 a.m. but, as the deceased
thought that he could get a seat in some truck near the Prem
Hotel and the Octroi barrier, they left the bus-stand for
the Octroi barrier. When they reached the house of Kotwal
Singh on the way, both the accused attacked the deceased
with chhuri and knife, respectively; Jadunath had the chhuri
and Girand Singh had the knife. Both the deceased and Prem
Narain were unarmed. On hearing the, cries of the deceased
Prem Narain asked the appellants why they were attacking the
deceased. Then Girand Singh, appellant, advanced towards
him and gave a knife cut at his right wrist. On the
deceased falling down both accused persons attacked him with
their respective weapons. On his raising the alarm Mahesh
Chandra and Dwarka Prasad who were coming along the same
road came and they shouted at the appellants. On hearing
their shouts the accused ran away. The deceased died on the
spot.
The First Information Report was lodged at 8 a.m., the
Police Station being only two furlongs from the scene of
occurrence. In the First Information Report, in the second
column, under the heading "Name and residence of accused",
it was stated as follows
"1. Jadu Nath Singh, father’s name not known
and
2. Girand Singh father’s name not known.
Ahirs by caste, residents of Garhia Kishunpur
P.S. Bewar, Distt. Mainpuri."
The accused surrendered on March 12, 1968, and
it appears that an application was filed by
the advocate on their behalf that they be kept
ba pardah as they might claim identification.
Another application was put in on March 25,
1968, in which it was stated that the
witnesses other than Prem Narain were
strangers and they applied that there should
be an identification parade. On April 19,
1968, the then Public Prosecutor submitted a
report to the Additional District Magistrate
as under
"Accused Jadu Nath Singh and Girand Singh in
case Cr. No. 24 under Section 302 I.P.C., P.S.
Bewar, have applied for identification, vide
application herewith attached. It may
be submitted that they are named in the F.I.R.
and charge sheet against them has also been
received. The applications are moved to delay
this case. Submitted for n.a."
920
The Additional District Magistrate (Judicial)
passed the following order on the application,
on April 20, 1968 :
"As charge sheet has already been received and
the accused have been named by P.Ws., there
appears to be no justification for ordering
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test identification. Accused be informed
accordingly. The jail authorities be informed
not to keep them ba parda."
We have set out these facts in detail because, as will
presently appear, one of the points raised by the learned
counsel is that failure to put up the accused for
identification either vitiated the trial or, in any case,
rendered the evidence of, P.W. 2, Mahesh Chandra, and P.W.
3, Dwarka Prasad, useless.
We may here notice that portion of the evidence of Dr. N. K.
Mital, who conducted the postmortem examination and on which
one other point is sought to be founded. He found that the
stomach was empty and the small intestines were half full
and the large intestines were also half full. In cross-
examination he stated that since the stomach was empty, the
deceased should have taken his last meal about 4 to 6 hours
before the infliction of the injuries." He was asked: "’The
evidence is that the deceased took puris and vegetable at 8
p.m. on 25-2-68; and according to the case for the
prosecution his murder took place at 7.30 a.m. on 26-2-68.
At the time of post mortem the stomach was found empty and
both the small and large intestines were found half full.
Does it not indicate that in all likelihood the man was
murdered between 3 and 4 a.m. ?" To this question Dr. Mital
answered
"No. It is not an indication of this fact.
After finishing his meal at about 8 or 8.30
p.m. on 25-2-68 the stomach could have got
empty by 2 or 2.30 a.m. The digested food
material should have come in the small
intestine by about 2 or 2.30 a.m. Complete
digestion takes place in the small
intestine...... And if he had answered the
call of nature the preceding evening fully and
completely, even then the small and large- in-
testines might be half full and stomach empty
if he had taken puries with vegetable at 8
p.m. on 25-2-68."’
The learned Sessions Judge believed the evidence of Prem
Narain, corroborated as it was by the injuries sustained by
him in the course of the occurrence at the hands of one of
the assailants, namely, Girand Singh. He also believed the
evidence of Mahesh Chandra, P.W. 2, and Dwaraka Prasad, P.W.
3. He relied on the fact that the appellants had absconded
immediately after the crime and had only appeared before the
Court as late as March 12,
921
1968, after proceedings under ss. 87 and 88 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure had been taken against them. Regarding
the claim of the appellants for identification the learned
Sessions Judge observed that during the course of
investigation both Mahesh Chandra and Dwarka Prasad had
named the accused persons, and it would indeed have been
surprising if the Additional District Magistrate (Judicial)
had directed the accused to be paraded at a test
identification parade in the jail. He observed that the
evidence indicated that the accused persons were not
strangers even to Mahesh Chandra and Dwarka Prasad at the
time of the occurrence. Mahesh Chandra had stated in his
evidence that he had known the accused persons for about 4
years and that they were living at village Garhiya lying at
a distance of three furlongs from Bewar, and that Girand
Singh was reading at the Amar Shaheed Inter College, Bewar.
Dwarka Prasad had stated that he had seen Girand visiting
Bewar before that day. He had also seen Jadu Nath Singh at
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Bewar but only once or twice before that. For all these
reasons the learned Sessions Judge held that the
applications claiming identification were not bona fide and
were intended to protract the proceedings, and accordingly
he was unable to draw any adverse inference against the
prosecution for the omission to parade the accused persons
at a test identification parade in the jail.
The High Court believed the three eyewitnesses, Prem Narain,
Mahesh Chandra and Dwarka Prasad. The High Court held that
"Mahesh and Dwarka Prasad are wholly independent witnesses
having no affinity with the deceased and entertaining no
animosity towards the appellants." The High Court observed
that these’ witnesses had claimed to have known the
appellants for the last six or seven years as they had been
frequently visiting the town of Bewar, and the appellant,
Girand Singh, was a student in a college at Bewar.
The learned counsel for the appellants raised two principal
points before us
(1) Since the accused were denied identification the trial
was vitiated;
(2) The medical evidence is in conflict with the
prosecution case about the time of the assault.
The learned counsel further urged that the number and nature
of injuries belie the prosecution story, and that the
application by the deceased to the Superintendent of Police
was nothing but a peshbandi. He urged that the eye-
witnesses were not reliable and the courts below had missed
the point that the appellants could not have anticipated
that the deceased would be at this particular spot at that
time.
922
The learned counsel relied on the following observations of
the Lahore High Court in Sajjan Singh v. Emperor(1)
"If an accused person is already well-known to
the witnesses, an identification parade would,
of course, be only a waste of time. If,
however, the witnesses claim to have known the
accused previously, while the accused himself
denies this, it is difficult to see how the
claim made by the witnesses can be used as a
reason for re using to allow their claim to be
put to the only practical test. Even if the
denial of the accused is false, no harm is
done, and the value of the evidence given by
the witnesses may be increased. It is true
that it is by no means uncommon for persons
who have been absconding for a long time to.
claim an identification parade in the hope
that their appearance may have changed suffi-
ciently for them to escape recognition. Even
so, this is not in itself a good ground for
refusing to allow any sort of test to be
carried out. It may be that the witnesses may
not be able to identify a person whom they
knew by sight owing to some change of
appearance or even to weakness of memory, but
this is only one- of the facts along with many
others, such as the length of time that has
elapsed, which will have to be taken into
consideration in determining whether the
witnesses are telling the truth or not."
State of U.P. v. Jagnoo (2 ) refers to Sajjan
Singh v. Emperor(1) with approval.
In re Sangiah(3) the decision of the Lahore
High Court in Sajjan Singh v. Emperor (Supra)
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was dissented from Rajamannar, J., observed :
"I am unable to find any provision in the Code
which entitles an accused to demand that an
identification parade should be held at or
before the enquiry or the trial. An
identification parade belongs to the stage of
investigation by the police. The, question
whether a witness has or has not identified
the accused during the investigation is not
one which is in itself relevant at the trial.
The actual evidence regarding identification
is that which is given by the witness in
Court. The fact that a particular witness has
been able to identify the accused at an
identification trade is only a circumstance
corroborative of the identification in Court.
If a witness has
(1) A.I.R. 1945 Lab. 48, 50. (2) A.I.R. 1968
All. 333,
(3) A.T.R. 1948 Mad. 113,
923
not identified the accused at a parade or
otherwise during the investigation the fact
may be relied on by the accused, but I find
nothing in the provisions of the Code which
confers a right on the accused to demand that
the investigation should be conducted in a
particular way."
In Perkash Chand Sogani v. The State of
Rajasthan (1) (an unreported decision of this
Court) in connection with the point regarding
identification, it was observed :
"Much is sought to be made out of the fact
that no identification parade was held at the
earliest opportunity in order to find out
whether P.W. 7 Shiv Lal could have identified
the appellant as the person who was at the
wheel of the car and drove it and reliance is
placed upon Awadh Singh & Others v. The Patna
State(2) Provash Kumar Bose and Another v.
The King(3) and also Phipson on the Law of
Evidence, 9th Ed., p. 415 to justify the
contention that in criminal cases it is not
sufficient to identify the prisoner in the
dock but the police should have held an
identification parade at the earliest possible
opportunity to show that the accused person
had been connected with the crime. It is also
the defence case that Shiv Lal did not know
the appellant. But on a reading of the
evidence of P.W. 7 it seems to us clear that
Shiv Lal knew the appellant by sight. Though
he made a mistake about his name by referring
to him as Kailash Chandra, it was within the
knowledge of Shiv Lal that the appellant was a
brother of Manak Chand and he identified him
as such. These circumstances are quite enough
to show that the absence of the identification
parade would riot vitiate the evidence. A
person, who is well-known by sight as the
brother of Manak Chand, even before, the
commission of the occurrence, need not be put
before an identification parade in order to be
marked out. We do not think that there is any
justification for the contention that the
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absence of the identification parade or a
mistake made as to his name, would be
necessarily fatal to the prosecution case in
the circumstances."
In Awadh Singh v. The State(2) it was held that "the accused
person may or may not have legal right to claim for test
identification and the holding of test identification may or
may not be a rule of law, but it is a rule of prudence.
Test identification parade should be held especially when
the accused persons definitely as-
(1) Criminal Appeal No. 92 of 1956, decided on January 15,
1957.
(2) A.I.R. 1954 Patna 483,
(3) A.I.R. 1951 Cal. 475,
924
sert that they were unknown to the prosecution witnesses
either by name or by face and they requested the authorities
concerned to have the test identification parade held."
In Provesh Kumar Bose v. The King(1), a Division Bench of
the Calcutta High (Harries C.J., & Das Gupta, J.) held:
"The fact that the witnesses have identified
in Court the accused is of very little
consequence in a prosecution under s. 384,
Penal Code, when none of the witnesses knew
the accused from before........ the cor-
roborative evidence which one is entitled to
expect in cases of this nature is the evidence
of the witnesses having pointed the accused
whom they identified in Court from the midst
of other persons with whom they were mixed up
at a test identification parade. The evidence
of their having identified such persons at a
test identification parade has no substantive
value, but is very important corroboration of
their evidence in Court."
In Kanta Prasad v. Delhi Administration ( 3 )
a point was made regarding non-holding of test
identification parade by the police and this
Court observed :
"As for the test identification parade, it is
true that no test identification parade was
held. The appellants were known to the
police officials who had deposed against the
appellants and the only persons who did not
know them before were the persons who gave
evidence of association, to which the High
Court did not attach much importance. It
would no doubt have been prudent to hold a
test identification parade with respect to
witnesses who did not know the accused before
the occurrence, but failure to hold such a
parade would not make inadmissible the
evidence of identification in court. The
weight to be attached to such identification
would be a matter for the courts of fact and
it is not for this Court to reassess the
evidence unless exceptional grounds were
established necessitating such a course."
It seems to us that, it has been clearly laid down by this
Court in Perkash Chand Sogani v. The State of Rajasthan(3)
that the absence of test identification in all cases is not
fatal and if the accused person is well-known by sight it
would be waste of time to put him up for identification. Of
course if the prosecution fails to hold an identification on
the plea that the witnesses already knew the accused well
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and it transpires in the course of the trial
(1) A.I.R. 1951 Cal. 475. (2) [1958] S.C.R. 1218,1221.
(3) G.A. No. 92 of 1956 decided on 15-1-1957.
925
hat the witnesses did not know the accused previously, the
prosecution would run the risk of losing its case. It seems
to us that if there is any doubt in the matter the
prosecution should hold an identification parade specially
if an accused says that the alleged eyewitnesses did not
know him previously. It may be that there is no express
provision in the Code of Criminal Procedure enabling an
accused to insist. on an identification parade but if the
accused does make an application and that application is
turned down and it transpires during the course of the trial
that the witnesses did not know the accused previously, as
pointed out above the prosecution will, unless there is some
other evidence, run the risk of losing the, case on this
point.
In the present case, however, it is clear that P.W. Mahesh
Chandra knew the accused persons for about four years and
said :
"I know the accused persons, Jadunath Singh
and Girand Singh for about 4 years. They live
at village Garhiya lying at a distance of
three furlongs from Bewar. Girand Singh is
reading at the Amar Shaheed Inter College,
Bewar."
No cross-examination was directed on this
point. P.W. 3, Dwarika Prasad, stated
"I had seen Girand visiting Bewar before that
but I had seen Jadunath at Bewar only once or
twice before that day. Identifies both the
accused persons in the dock. Lays hand
correctly on Jadunath; and also lays hands-
correctly on Girand in the, dock."
In cross-examination he stated
"I had seen Jadunath accused at Bewar at the
shop of one Chhakku once or twice before the
occurrence. I had seen him two or 2-1/2 years
back."
It seems to us that the reason given by the Public
Prosecutor in the report and the reason given by the
Additional District Magistrate (Judicial) in the order
directing that identification requested for be not held were
not valid. The fact that a charge sheet had been received
and the accused had been named by P.W.s was no justification
for not having ordered the test identification. But on the
facts of this case it is clear that P.W. 2 at least knew the
accused from before. As regards P.W. 3, although he claims
to have known the accused, it is clear that his knowledge of
the accused was very scant and if it had not been for the
evidence of P.W. 2 we would not have placed reliance on the
926
evidence of P.W. 3 in view of the fact that the police did
not ask him to identify the appellant.
It is stated in Phipson on the Law of
Evidence, 9th Ed., p. 415, as follows :
"In criminal cases it is improper to identify
the accused only when in the dock; the police
should place him, before hand, with others,
and ask the witness to pick him out. Nor
should the witness be guided in any way nor
asked "Is that the man
We consider that the same is the law in India, if the
identity is in doubt.
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Accordingly on the facts of this case we are of the opinion
that the trial was not vitiated because the accused persons
were denied identification.
Regarding the second point, we have already extracted the
evidence of the doctor, and it is quite clear to us that the
evidence is not in conflict with the prosecution case. If
the occurrence took place at about 7.30 a.m. and the
deceased had not taken any food in the morning, his stomach
would still be empty at 7.30 a.m. If anything the medical
evidence destroys the case of the defence that the murder
took place at about 3 in the morning. We are unable to
think that the deceased would leave with Prem Narain at 3
a.m. to catch a bus which was supposed to leave at about 7
a.m.
This appeal is by special leave and this Court does not
reappropriation the evidence. The, other points raised by
the learned counsel are of that nature, and at any rate
there is no substance in those points.
The appeal accordingly fails and is dismissed.
G.C. Appeal dismissed.
L694SupCI/70-2500-29-4-72-GIPF.
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