Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
LALJI & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF U.P.
DATE OF JUDGMENT17/01/1989
BENCH:
SAIKIA, K.N. (J)
BENCH:
SAIKIA, K.N. (J)
SHETTY, K.J. (J)
CITATION:
1989 AIR 754 1989 SCR (1) 130
1989 SCC (1) 437 JT 1989 (1) 109
1989 SCALE (1)77
ACT:
Indian Penal Code 1860: Sections 141, 149/302.
Unlawful Assembly--What is--Common object--Ascertainment
of.
Distinct offence created by section 149---Imposes con-
structive or vicarious criminal liability--Offence committed
in prosecution of common object--Corroboration as to partic-
ipation of individual members of unlawful assembly--Not
necessary--Prosecution is not obliged to prove overt Act of
each member.
Criminal Trial: Court cannot afford to be charitable in
undeserving cases--Essentiality for peace and order in
society.
HEADNOTE:
The four appellants along with seven other accused were
tried under Sections 147, 148 and 302 read with 149 of the
Indian Penal Code. The trial Court convicted the eight
accused, including the four appellants, under section
302/149 I.P.C. and awarded life imprisonment. Appellants
Nos. 1, 2 & 4 were also convicted under Section 147 I.P.C.
and each awarded one years R.I. Appellant No. 3 was also
convicted under Section 148 I.P.C. and awarded two years
R.I. The remaining three accused were acquitted by the Trial
Court for want of corroboration. On appeal by the eight
convicted persons the High Court upheld the conviction of
only four appellants on all the counts and allowed the
appeal of the other four co-accused for want of corrobora-
tion.
In this appeal by special leave it was contended that
appellants No. 3 and 4 should also be acquitted for want of
corroboration as the Trial Court has acquitted three accused
and the High Court, on appeal, has further acquitted four
accused for want of corroboration.
The appeal was contested on behalf of the State contend-
ing that in case of conviction under section 302 read with
section 149 of the I.P.C. corroboration in case of individu-
al accused was not necessary and there
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was enough corroboration on record to prove that the accused
were members of the unlawful assembly at the time of commis-
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sion of offence.
Dismissing the appeal,
HELD: 1. Section 149 creates a specific and distinct
offence. It imposes constructive or vicarious criminal
liability of the members of the unlawful assembly for the
unlawful acts committed pursuant to the common object by any
other member of the assembly. [135B]
1.1. It is not necessary that all persons forming an
unlawful assembly must do some overt acts. The section makes
a member of the unlawful assembly responsible as a principal
for the acts of each, and all, merely because he is a member
of an unlawful assembly. While overt acts and active partic-
ipation may indicate common intention of the persons perpe-
trating the crime, the mere presence in the unlawful assem-
bly may fasten vicarious criminal liability under the sec-
tion. The basis of the constructive guilt under section 149
is mere membership of the unlawful assembly, with requisite
common object or knowledge. [135E-F]
1.2. The two essentials of the section are the commis-
sion of an offence by any member of an unlawful assembly and
that such offence must have been committed in prosecution of
the common object of that assembly or must be such as the
members of that assembly knew to be likely to be committed.
The common object of the assembly must be one of the five
objects mentioned in section 141 of the Indian Penal Code.
[134G-H]
2. In an appeal by the persons convicted under section
302 with the aid of section 149 I.P.C. the question whether
a particular person was a member of the unlawful assembly at
the relevant time may be examined; and if it is found from
the evidence on record that he was not a member of the
unlawful assembly, he could not be convicted with the aid of
section 149. [136F-G]
2.1. But once the Court holds that certain accused
persons formed an unlawful assembly and an offence is com-
mitted by any member of that assembly in prosecution of the
common object of that assembly or such as the members of the
assembly knew to be likely to be committed in prosecution of
that object, every person who at the time of committing that
offence was a member of the same assembly is to be held
guilty of that offence. After such a finding it is not open
to the
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Court to see as to who actually did the offensive act. The
prosecution is not obliged to prove which specific overt act
was done by which of the accused. [135G-H; 136A]
2.2. From the evidence on record it has been satisfacto-
rily established that appellants No. 3 and 4 were members of
the unlawful assembly at the relevant time. Both the Courts
below have held them to have been members of the unlawful
assembly. The fact that they were not active participants
and whether any specific injury could individually be at-
tributed to them or not are not at all material. [136D-E]
2.3. In the instant case the High Court having held that
the appellants formed an unlawful assembly carrying danger-
ous weapons with the common object of resorting to violence
and committed an offence punishable with the aid of Section
149 I.P.C. erred in acquitting some of the members on the
ground that they themselves did not perform any violent act
or that there was no corroboration of their participation.
Doing so would amount to forgetting the very nature and
essence of the offence created by Section 149. [136B-D]
2.4 The Court in undeserving cases cannot afford to be
charitable in the administration of criminal justice which
is so vital for peace and order in the society. [136D]
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JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 227
of 1983.
From the Judgment and Order dated 19.8.1982 of the
Allahabad High Court in Crl. Appeal No. 680 of 1976.
R.L. Kohli and Shakil Ahmed Syed for the Appellants.
Prithvi Raj and Dalveer Bhandari for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
K.N. SAIKIA, J. This appeal by special leave is from the
judgment of the High Court of judicature at Allahabad in
Criminal Appeal No. 680 of 1976 dismissing the appeal of the
four instant appellants namely, Lalji, Mansa, Milkhi and
Bhagwati and upholding their conviction and sentence of life
imprisonment under Sections 302/149 and also the conviction
of Milkhi with sentence of two years R.I. under section 148
I.P.C and of the other three appellants under Section 147
I.P.C. with sentence of one year R.I.
133
The facts are simple. On 24.6.1975 at noon Manju, son of
Girdhaft Lal, man-handled Chhotey Lal and Mansa, nephews of
Minister Lal, after they gave him (Manju) a push. The prose-
cution version was that Minister Lal with a cane in hand,
Chhotey Lal with a Kanta, Milkhi and Chainu with spears and
others with lathis arrived near Girdhaft Lal’s house and
after an altercation started assaulting Girdhaft and Siddhu.
The alarm attracted Ram Avtar and Manju who came there.
The appellants party started assaulting them also whereupon
they retreated to their house but were followed by Minister
Lal, Lalji and others of the party. Girdhaft Lal and Siddhu
died in consequence of the assault. Ram Avtar picked up the
loaded gun of his father Girdhaft and fired a shot at Minis-
ter Lal who fell down dead and by another shot he injured
Lalji.
The defence version was that Girdhaft Lal summoned
Minister Lal to his house and the accused persons came with
or after Minister Lal. This resulted in a cross case on
Lalji’s F.I.R. (Ex. Ka-19). It has admittedly resulted in
acquittal.
The present case was registered under F.I.R. (Ex. Ka-l)
upon the information lodged by Babu Ram son of Siddhu at
P.S. Maigalganj. Altogether eleven persons, including the
appellants herein faced trial. The learned trial court
relying on the evidence of the three eye witnesses convicted
eight and acquitted three of them, namely, Ram Lotan, Kripa
Dayal and Barkau. The eight convicted persons were appel-
lants before the High Court in Criminal Appeal No. 680 of
1976. Out of them conviction of four appellants was upheld,
while the other four, namely, Shiv Kumar, Chottey Lal, Munna
and Chainu were acquitted by the High Court.
The learned counsel for the appellants Mr. R.L. Kohli,
Sr. Advocate submits that as out of the eleven persons three
were acquitted by the trial court and four were acquitted by
the High Court as there was no corroboration in their cases,
the position of two of the appellants, namely, Milkhi and
Bhagwati remains the same and they must also be similarly
acquitted for want of corroboration.
The learned counsel for the State Mr. Prithvi Raj, Sr.
Advocate counters submitting that when the appellants have
been convicted under section 302/149 I.P.C the question of
corroboration in case of individual appellants would not
arise; and there is enough corrobora-
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tion in the evidence including medical evidence on record to
prove that they were members of the unlawful assembly when
the offence was committed.
The precise question to be decided in this appeal,
therefore, is whether in view of death caused to Girdhaft
and Siddhu by the unlawful assembly which is punishable
under section 302 with the aid of Section 149 I.P.C. the
corroboration as to participation of each individual member
of the assembly would be necessary, and if so, whether in
the instant case there is such corroboration..
Section 149 I.P.C. provides that if an offence is com-
mitted by any member of an unlawful assembly in prosecution
of the common object of that assembly, or such as the mem-
bers of the assembly knew to be likely to be committed in
prosecution of that object, every person, who at the time of
committing of that offence is a member of the same assembly,
is guilty of that offence. As has been defined in Section
141 I.P.C., an assembly of five or more persons is designat-
ed an ’Unlawful Assembly’, if the common object of the
persons composing that assembly is to do any act or acts
stated in clauses ’First’, ’Second’, ’Third’, ’Fourth’, and
’Fifth’ of that section. An assembly, as the explanation to
the section says, which was not unlawful when it assembled,
may subsequently become an unlawful assembly. Whoever being
aware of facts which render any assembly an unlawful assem-
bly intentionally joins that assembly, or continues in it,
is said to be a member of an unlawful assembly. Thus, when-
ever so many as five or more persons meet together to sup-
port each other, even against opposition, in carrying out
the common object which is likely to involve violence or to
produce in the minds of rational and firm men any reasonable
apprehension of violence, then even though they ultimately
depart without doing anything whatever towards carrying out
their common object, the mere fact of their having thus met
will constitute an offence. Of course, the alarm must not be
merely such as would frighten any foolish or timid person,
but must be such as would alarm person of reasonable firm-
ness and courage. The two essentials of the section are the
commission of an offence by any member of an unlawful assem-
bly and that such offence must have been committed in prose-
cution of the common object of that assembly or must be such
as the members of that assembly knew to be likely to be
committed. Not every person is necessarily guilty but only
those who share in the common object. The common object of
the assembly must be one of the five objects mentioned in
Section 141 I.P.C. Common object of the unlawful assembly
can be gathered from the nature of the assembly,
135
arms used by them and the behaviour of the assembly at or
before scene of occurrence. It is an inference to be deduced
from the facts and circumstances of each case.
Section 149 makes every member of an unlawful assembly
at the time of committing of the offence guilty of that
offence. Thus this section created a specific and distinct
offence. In other words, it created a constructive or vicar-
ious liability of the members of the unlawful assembly for
the unlawful acts committed pursuant to the common object by
any other member of that assembly. However, the vicarious
liability of the members of the unlawful assembly extends
only to the acts done in pursuance of the common object of
the unlawful assembly, or to such offences as the members of
the unlawful assembly knew to be likely to be committed in
prosecution of that object. Once the case of a person fails
within the ingredients of the section the question that he
did nothing with his own hands would be immaterial. He
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cannot put forward the defence that he did not with his own
hands commit the offence committed in prosecution of the
common object of the unlawful assembly or such as the mem-
bers of the assembly knew to be likely to be committed in
prosecution of that object. Everyone must be taken to have
intended the probable and natural results of the combination
of the acts in which he joined. It is not necessary that all
the persons forming an unlawful assembly must do some overt
act. When the accused persons assembled together, armed with
lathis, and were parties to the assault on the complainant
party, the prosecution is not obliged to prove which specif-
ic overt act was done by which of the accused. This section
makes a member of the unlawful assembly responsible as a
principal for the acts of each, and all, merely because he
is a member of an unlawful assembly. While overt act and
active participation may indicate common intention of the
person perpetrating the crime, the mere presence in the
unlawful assembly may fasten vicariously criminal liability
under section 149. It must be noted that the basis of the
constructive guilt under section 149 is mere membership of
the unlawful assembly, with the requisite common object or
knowledge.
Thus, once the Court hold that certain accused persons
formed in unlawful assembly and an offence is committed by
any member of that assembly in prosecution of the common
object of that assembly, or such as the members of the
assembly knew to be likely to be committed in prosecution of
that object, every person who at the time of committing of
that offence was a member of the same assembly is to be held
guilty of that offence. After such a finding it would not be
open to
136
the Court to see as to who actually did the offensive act or
require the prosecution to prove which of the members did
which of the offensive acts. The prosecution would have no
obligation to prove it.
In the instant case after having held that the appel-
lants formed an unlawful assembly carrying dangerous weapons
with the common object of resorting to violence (as de-
scribed in the charge) it was not open to the High Court to
acquit some of the members on the ground that they them-
selves did not perform any violent act, or that there was no
corroboration of their participation. In other words, having
held that they formed an unlawful assembly and committed an
offence punishable with the aid of section 149 I.P.C., the
High Court erred in examining which of the members only did
actively participate and in acquitting those who, according
to the Court, did not so participate. Doing so would amount
to forgetting the very nature and essence of the offence
created by section 149 I.P.C The Court in undeserving cases
cannot afford to be charitable in the administration of
criminal justice which is so vital for peace and order in
the society.
On the basis of the evidence on record Milkhi and Bhag-
wati’s membership of the unlawful assembly at the relevant
time has been satisfactorily established. Both the courts
below having held them to have been members of the unlawful
assembly, the mere fact that they were not active partici-
pants, would be of no avail. It is not open to the court to
scrutinise as to whether any member of the unlawful assembly
actively participated.
In an appeal by persons convicted under Section 302 with
the aid of 149 I.P.C., the question whether a particular
person was a member of that unlawful assembly at the rele-
vant time may of course be examined; and if it is found from
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the evidence on record that he was not a member of the
unlawful assembly, he could not be convicted with the aid of
section 149. The question to be examined by us in the in-
stant case is whether Milkhi and Bhagwati were members of
the unlawful assembly at the relevant time and not whether
there was enough corroboration for their individual partici-
pation in the commission of the offence.
It has not been denied that the names of Milkhi and
Bhagwati were mentioned in the F.I.R. (Ex. Ka-l). P.W. 2
Manju son of Girdhari, whose presence at the place of occur-
rence has not been challenged, mentioned Milkhi and Bhagwati
among the accused persons with their relationship. He cate-
gorically stated that the two, amongst others,
137
were present at his house beating his father and uncle and
chasing him and Ram Avtar. Milkhi according to him had a
spear in his hand. Manju denied the suggestion that Milkhi
and Bhagwati were standing there on the side of the witness-
es. P.W. 3 Smt. Ram Devi clearly corroborated Milkhi’s
participation. P.W. 1 Babu Ram while giving vivid descrip-
tion of the occurrence stated that Milkhi was there in the
assembly with spear and Bhagwati with a lathi and that all
the persons present beat Girdhaft and Siddhu. Milkhi also
assisted in carrying Minister Lal after he was shot. In
reply to the question who beat Manju he clearly stated that
Mansa and Bhagwati beat him with lathi when he was entering
the house. D.W. 2 Lalji stated that at the time of the
occurrence Puran, Bhagwati, Kripal etc. had also come. In
the F.I.R. (Ex. Ka-19/C.I) lodged by Lalji on the same
occurrence presence of Milkhi and Bhagwati was admitted by
him. The submission that they were mere spectators could not
be believed.
From the above evidence on record it could not be held
that Milkhi and Bhagwati were not members of the unlawful
assembly at the the relevant time. Whether any specific
injury could individually be attributed to them or not could
not at all be material. The submission that the two be
acquitted on ground of lack of corroboration has, therefore,
to be rejected.
In the facts and circumstances of the case it is not
open to this Court to apply the reasoning of the High Court
to acquit members of the unlawful assembly for lack of
corroboration as to their participation.
No other submission was made for the other appellants.
In the result, we do not find any merit in this appeal
and hence it is dismissed.
Appellant Mansa is on bail. He shall surrender to serve
out his sentence.
T.N.A. Appeal dismissed.
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