Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 13
PETITIONER:
STATE OF U.P.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
PARAS NATH SINGH & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT15/01/1973
BENCH:
DUA, I.D.
BENCH:
DUA, I.D.
ALAGIRISWAMI, A.
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
CITATION:
1973 AIR 1073 1973 SCR (1) 313
CITATOR INFO :
E&D 1989 SC1335 (60)
ACT:
Criminal law-Practice and procedure-Eye witnesses relatives
of deceased-No intrinsic infirmity in their evidence-If
corroboration necessary for sustaining conviction-Sentence
of life imprisonment instead of death-Circumstances
justifying.
HEADNOTE:
The six respondents (accused) were convicted by the trial
Court for offences under s. 302/149, I.P.C. Four of them
were sentenced to death and two to imprisonment for life on
the grounds that one was a ’budding lawyer’ and the other
was 15 years old. The son and daughter of the deceased
were examined as eye witnesses to the occurrence. Four
persons, who were cited as eye-witnesses by the prosecution,
were given up, because, the counsel for prosecution
represented that he had reason to believe that they would
not speak the truth. They were neither examined by the
trial court under s. 540, Cr.P.C., nor as defence witnesses.
The trial court scrutinised carefully and properly evaluated
the evidence of the son and daughter, and as the son was 12
or 13 years old, applied the correct principles governing
the appreciation of the evidence of a child witness and
accepted their evidence as true. The High Court on appeal,
examined the 4 witnesses given up by the prosecution, as
court witnesses. It devoted a major part of its judgment to
the consideration of the additional evidence recorded by it.
Feeling wholly unimpressed by that evidence, the High Court
endorsed the view of the prosecution that these witnesses
were given up as they were not prepared to speak the truth
and even issued notice under s. 479A, Cr. P. C. to one of.
them to show cause why he should not be prosecuted for
perjury. The High Court disagreed with the main arguments
urged on behalf of the accused for discrediting the
testimony of the son and daughter. But, the High Court
acquitted the accused on the view that the son and daughter,
being closely related to the deceased and being in a sense,
chance witnesses, their evidence without corroboration did
not prove the, guilt of the accused beyond reasonable doubt.
HELD : (1) The judgment of the High Court reversing the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 13
judgment of the trial court and acquitting the accused
caused grave miscarriage of justice. [325B-C]
Once the two eye witnesses were held to be trustworthy
witnesses there was no cogent reason for not acting upon
their evidence. The fact that the other persons who were
present at the spot and had witnessed the occurrence have,
without any good reason and, perhaps with oblique motive,
chosen not to state the truth in court and thereby
obstructed the course of justice, is a sound reason for
accepting the testimony of the son and daughter. To decline
to act upon their testimony merely because of the absence of
other witnesses to corroborate them in court, is to defeat
the cause of justice in this case. it was wholly
unreasonable for the High Court to dub them as chance wit-
nesses, as there is no material on record to support such an
observation. and the observation runs counter to the High
Court’s own line of
314
reasoning earlier. There is thus absolutely no
justification for the view that their testimony leaves any
scope for reasonable doubt about the guilt of the accused.
It could not be considered that because of their
relationship to the deceased, they would spare the real
assailants and falsely implicate the accused, and in the
circumstances of the case, there is no scope for such a
hypothesis. There is no general rule that the evidence of
the relations of the deceased must be corroborated for
securing the conviction of the offender. Each case is to be
considered on its own facts. [325F-326C]
In the present case, there is an instrinsic ring of truth in
the evidence of the two eye witnesses. The straight forward
nature of their deposition and the fact that they were
undoubtedly in, a position to, identify the assailants
coupled with the recovery of blood-stained earth from the
place of occurrence leave no reasonable doubt about the
guilt of the accused. [326C-D]
(2) No leniency should have been shown to the ’budding
lawyer’, because, he, as a result of his education and
profession should have ,exercised a restraining influence on
his associates rather than allowed himself to be misled by
them into being a party to a gruesome murder. However, in
view of the facts that (a) the murder was committed as far
back as 1968; (b) on conviction by the trial court in
September 1969, the accused were under the shadow of death;
(c) the accused were acquitted by the High Court in May
1970; and (d) it is not possible to assign with certainty
the fatal blows to any particular accused person, the ends
of justice would be served by sentencing all the accused to
imprisonment for life. [326G-H; 327A-C]
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeal No. 49 of
1971.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order May 18,
1970 of the Allahabad High Court at Allahabad in Criminal
Appeal No. 1947 of 1969.
O. P. Rana for the appellant.
Nuruddin Ahmad and U. P. Singh for the respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
DUA, J.-The State of U. P., the appellant in this appeal by
special leave, assails the judgment of the Allahabad High
Court dated May 18, 1970 acquitting on appeal the six
respondents in this Court who were convicted by the Court of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 13
the first Temporary Civil & Sessions Judge, Pratapgarh on
September 1, 1969, of various offences under the Indian
Penal Code. The accused Paras Nath Singh, Ramendra Pratap
Singh, Hari Saran Singh and Lal Pratap Singh were sentenced
to death under S. 302 read with s. 149, I.P.C. The accused
Surendra Pratap Singh and Shiva Pratap Singh were also
convicted under the said sections but sentenced to life
imprisonment. Leniency was shown to them by the trial court
because Surendra Pratap Singh was stated to be a budding
lawyer and Shiv Pratap Singh, being of tender age (15 or 16
years old),
315
was considered to have apparently been misled by his
relations. Excepting Surendra Pratap Singh and Hari Saran
Singh, the remaining accused were also sentenced to rigorous
imprisonment for one year each under S. 147, I.P.C. They
were further convicted under s. 148, I.P.C. and sentenced to
rigorous imprisonment for two years each. Accused Paras
Nath Singh was in addition, sentenced to rigorous
imprisonment for six months under s. 397, I.P.C.
The relevant facts necessary for our purpose may now be
stated. The six respondents (hereinafter called the
accused) were charged with the murder of Suresh Singh on
July 9, 1968 and with the theft of his gun and cartridges
along with the container. The deceased and the accused are
all Thakurs by caste residing in village Isanpur. Accused
Surendra Pratap Singh and Ramendra Pratap Singh are brothers
residing in a house adjoining that of the deceased, being
thus his next door neighbours. Shiva Pratap Singh and Lal
Pratap Singh are cousins and the other accused per-sons are
said to be their associates. There was long standing enmity
between the deceased on the one hand and Ramendra Pratap
Singh and his family members on the other. About six or
seven months prior to the present occurrence, Ramendra
Pratap is said to have tried to fire at the deceased on
Dewali day and a case under s. 307, I.P.C. arising out of
the said incident was pending at the time of the murder of
the deceased. About five or six days prior to the murder
Ramendra Pratap Singh, Surendra Pratap Singh and one Vijai
Bahadur Singh are stated to have beaten the deceased inside
his house giving rise to another case under s. 107/117, Cr.
P. C. which was also pending at the time of the murder in
question. This enmity is stated to be the motive for the
murder of the deceased. Now turning to the, occurrence in
question on July 9, 1968, Suresh Singh deceased had gone to
Pratapgarh on cycle for some work carrying with him his gun
and cartridges. On his way back from Pratapgarh the same
evening at about sunset when he reached Rakhaha Bazar and
was on the Rakhaha Bazar-Kandbai kachha road, all the
accused persons emerged from the nearby Nala. They
surrounded their victim Suresh Singh, shouting that he
should be killed because he posed to be a great leader. The
accused who were armed with lathis, spears and farsha,
assaulted the deceased with their respective weapons. Sint.
Sheela Devi, P.W. 1, daughter of the deceased and Sachendra
Pratap Singh, (P.W. 2) son of the deceased also happened to
be-returning to their village from Rakhaha Bazar where they
had gone to purchase parwal (a vegetable) for their mother
who was not well. On hearing the alarm they went towards
the mala where they saw the accused assaulting their father
with lathis, spears and farsha. Several other persons,
including Shiva Pratap
5-L796Sup. C.I./73
316
Singh, Mahabir Singh, Ranmast Singh and Jagdish Bahadur
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 13
Singh were also attracted by the alarm to the place of
occurrence. The deceased fell down on receipt of injuries
and the accused ran away carrying with them the gun and
container of cartridges along with its contents belonging to
the deceased. The cycle and a jhola belonging to the
deceased and lying on the spot was sent home, by Sheela Devi
(P.W. 1) through one Mahabir. Sheela Devi also sent for her
mother (Smt. Sundari Devi) through the same man. The
mother arrived soon thereafter and Suresh Singh was taken on
an ekka to Diwan Mau from where he was taken in a taxi to
the District Hospital, Pratapgarh. Suresh Singh appears to
have expired on his way to the hospital near village Pipari.
The doctor on examining Suresh Singh informed Sheela Devi
that her father had already died and advised her to lodge a
report at the Police Station, Kotwali. She wrote out a
report of the occurrence (Ex. Ka-1) at the hospital and
gong with the dead body, went to Kotwali police station
where she handed over the written report the same night at
about 11.30 p.m. on the basis of which Ka-18. the formal
F.I.R. was prepared. A case under ss. 302/147/1481 149,
I.P.C. was thereupon registered and all the relevant papers
sent to the police station Kandhai. As a result of the
investigation, it was considered necessary also to frame a
charge against the accused persons under s. 379 read with S.
149, I.P.C. for the theft of the gun and the cartridges
along with their containers belonging to the deceased. The
foregoing is the prosecution version.
At the trial the only eye-witnesses deposing to the actual
occurrence were Smt. Sheela Devi, (P.W. 1) the daughter and
Sachendra Pratap Singh (P.W. 2), the son of the deceased.
P.W. 1 was about 19 years old when she gave evidence at the
trial in July, 1969 and P.W. 2 about 13 or 14 years old.
The other persons mentioned in the F.I.R. by P.W. 1 were not
produced as witnesses on the ground that they were not
prepared to depose in favour of the prosecution at the
trial. P.W. 1 and P.W. 2 have unfolded the prosecution case
deposing to the incident as witnessed by them. According to
P.W. 1, she and her younger brother who had gone to Rakhaha
Bazar in the afternoon for buying Parwal while returning to
their home, heard the alarm as they reached the kachcha
road. They went towards the side from which the noise came
and saw that their father was being beaten by Lalji, Chotey
Lal Sadhy and Nankoo with lathis, Hari Saran Singh with
ballam and Munna who is also called Sheo Pratap Singh, with
farsha. They took her father down into the Nala shouting,
"kill the sala he was playing the Part of Netagiri very
much". After the accused had run away, P.W. 1 went near her
father who. though badly injured, was still in a position to
speak. He told her and the other persons ,who had assembled
there that the accused persons had been hiding
317
inside the Nala and that they had forcibly taken him away
from the road into the Nala and beaten him. She sent her
father’s cycle and jhola home through Mahabir Singh also
requesting him to send her mother to the place of
occurrence. Her mother came there and after arranging for
an ekka, Suresh Singh was taken to Diwan Mau from where
Suresh Singh was taken to the hospital in a taxi. On the
way Suresh Singh expired near Pipari. After the doctor had
certified death of Suresh Singh, P.W. 1 was advised by the
doctor to make a report in the Sadar Police Station. She
wrote out a report in the hospital and along with the dead
body of the deceased, she went to the police station and
lodged the report in the Kotwali. Paras Nath, accused,
according to P.W. 1, had taken away with him the gun and the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 13
cartridge belt belonging to the deceased. She had herself
to go to the Kotwali to lodge the report because there was
no other adult male member left in their house. According
to her, Sarvashri Ram Pratap Singh, Krishnapal Singh, Ramesh
Prasad Singh and Ruddar Pratap Singh, Vakils, live in the
neighbourhood of her village. These persons being under the
influence of the lawyers, she could not say if they would be
willing to give evidence in support of the prosecution. She
was cross-examined at great length by four different lawyers
defending ,the accused persons. Sachendra Pratap Singh,
(P.W. 2), a boy who did not appear to the court to be more
than 12 or 13 years of age, was first questioned by the
trial court by asking him unexpected but intelligent
questions to which he gave rational and sensible answers
which impressed the court and the court came to the
conclusion that the boy understood the importance of justice
and of taking oath and was fully conscious of the
desirability of speaking the truth when on oath. P.W 2
fully corroborated P.W. 1 on all material points. He too
was cross-examined at great length by all the defence
counsel.
It appears that after the examination of P.W. 1 and 2 the
prosecuting counsel applied to the trial court stating that
Mahabir Singh, Shiva Pratap Singh, Ranmast Singh and Jagdish
Bahadur Singh were present in court but as the prosecuting
counsel had reason to believe that they would not speak the
truth, they were not being produced as witnesses by the
prosecution. It was suggested that ;they could be examined
by the court under S. 540, Cr. P.C. if considered proper or
the accused persons could examine them in their defence, if
they so liked. On this application the counsel for the
accused persons recorded a note opposing the suggestion and
describing the allegation against the witnesses as baseless.
Section 540, Cr. P.C., according to the defence counsel was
inapplicable and he also declined to examine these witnesses
in defence. The said witnesses were in these circumstances
discharged by the trial court on July 9, 1969.
318
The trial court in a very detailed and exhaustive judgment
dealing with every aspect in a very lucid manner, came to
the conclusion that P.W. 1 and P.W. 2 were both truthful
witnesses and their sincerity and honesty in speaking the
truth could not be doubted. After stating the principle
governing the evidentiary value of the testimony of a child
witness, the trial court made the. following observations
about the quality and value of the evidence of P.W. 2
"He has been cross-examined at a very great
length and that too by four sets of defence
lawyers repute. It is amazing to find that
despite their lengthy and cumbersome cross-
examination the witness has not been impaired.
Had he not been an eye-witness of the occur-
rence and had he been examined after tutoring
he could not have remained firm even for a
single moment. Tile said witness was tried to
be beguiled, tempted and also brow-beaten but
;to my utter surprise he maintained his mental
composure throughout and did not yield any-
where during the cross-examination. Even on
the most minute details the witness did not
confuse and gave convincing replies to them.
From the beginning to the end of the incident
he has successfully acquitted himself and not
a single thing could be pointed out in his
statement which could be used as a weapon
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 13
against him. The manner and the method which
the P.Ws. have exhibited in the witness box
have left an everlasting impression in my mind
about their sincerity and truthfulness. As a
Judge of fact I am definitely of the opinion
that unless truthful and honest the P.Ws. 1
and 2 would have collapsed under the weight of
this trying and tiring cross-examination".
The testimony of P.W. 2 according to the trial court was
fully supported and corroborated by his sister, P.W. 1, who
has unfolded the prosecution version about the occurrence in
question. The trial court also upheld the jurisdiction for
not producing the other witnesses in court. This is what
the trial court has said in this connection :
"The nature and number of injuries found on
the person of the deceased and that too in a
broad day light goes to show that the deceased
was beaten mercilessly. must have been awe
striking and the occurrence it must have left
an indelible impression that the accused meant
business and there was nothing which could
deter them from accomplishing their target.
This psychoanalysis of the
319
situation too has to be kept in mind before
giving a finding about the respective versions
of the parties. Several documents have been
filed in the case by the prosecution to show
that cases under sections 307, 323/ 452,
I.P.C. and under sections 107/117, Cr. P.C.
Were pending at the time of occurrence between
the deceased on the one hand and the accused
Ramendra and his family on the other. In
these circumstances there was nothing
surprising if even on-lookers did not dare to
come forward. Further I am constrained to
observe that had the accused been on bail even
the offsprings of the deceased i.e., P.Ws 1
and 2 could not. have come in the witness box
to depose about facts relating to the murder
of their father and in that case the fact of
even the death of the deceased would have been
enveloped in darkness.
Whatever reason may be there to it there is no
denying the fact that witnesses in the case
have kept back and have avoided coming
forward. In this connection I may recall the
statements of P.Ws 1, 2 and 4. Out of so many
public witnesses named in the charge-sheet
only P.Ws 1 and 2 could figure as eye-
witnesses of the occurrence., Had they not
been the family members of the deceased even
they would not have come. P.W. Inder Singh
has stated that the witnesses have been pres-
surised not to come. I am very much impressed
by the statements of P,Ws 1, 2 and 4 on this
$core,, Thus in the case of the present nature
no one could like to invite trouble for him by
coming in the witness box. There is not the
least doubt that either because of fear or be-
cause of other influences witnesses have not
liked to involve themselves in the matter.
Thus considering the evidence and the
circumstances of the case I feel that the
explanation offered by the prosecution
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 13
regarding the absence of other P.Ws in the
witness box has got to be accepted. Exhibits
Ka-14 and Ka-16 also lend assurance to this
finding".
November 1, 1967 made by Suresh Singh (deceased) against
Ramendra Pratap Singh and others lodged at 10.30 p.m with
respect to the attempted assault on him and firing of shots
the same day at about 6 p.m. Exhibit Ka-16 is an application
by Suresh Singh, deceased, dated November 6, 1967 made to
the Superintendent of Police, Pratapgarh, in which, after
referring to the incident of November 1, 1967 when Ramendra
Pratap Singh was alleged to have fired from the upper
portion of his house about 8 or 10 shots at Suresh Singh
from a double barrelled gun
320
of his grandfather, Raghav Pratap Singh, it was complained
that there was a constant danger to Suresh Singh and the
members of his family at the hands of Ramendra Pratap Singh,
Krishna Pratap Singh and others mentioned therein. At this
stage we consider it proper to reproduce the nature and
number of injuries inflicted on the deceased because
according to the trial court all those persons who might
have witnessed this occurrence must have been impressed by
the fact that the accused meant business and nothing could
deter them from accomplishing their objective. The follow-
ing ante-mortem injuries were found on the person of the
deceased
1. Lacerated wound 2" x I" bone deep on the fore-head 1
1/2" above the right eye-brow.
2. Lacerated wound 1" x 1/4" x scalp, deep just behind
injury no. 1.
3. Abrasion 1/2" x I" on the forehead 2" above the left
eyebrow.
4. Incised wound 21" x I"’ bone deep I" behind the left
ear ’directed downwards and outward-..
5. Incised wound 3" x I" muscle deep on the left side of
the face directed downwards and outwards
6. Incised wound 1" x 1/4" muscle deep just below the left
eye directed downwards and outwards.
7. Punctured wound I" x I’ x 1 1/2" over the bridge of the
nose directed upwards and inwards.
8. Incised wound II"’ x I" x muscle deep on the lower part
of the face below the chin.
9. Contusion I" x I’ on the top of the right shoulder.
10. Contusion 3" x II’-’ on the medical surface of the
right arm upper 1/3.
11. Contusion 3" x 2" on the back of the right arm lower 1
/3.
12. Contusion 3" x If’ on the back of the right forearm
middle 1/3.
13. Contusion 1" x 1" on the back of the right wrist.
14. Contusion 3"’ x 2" on the back of the right hand.
15. Lacerated wound I" x I" skin deep on the web between
’the right thumb and index finger.
16. Contusion 3" x 2" on the front of the chest near the
root of the neck.
321
17. Contusion 2" x I" on the front of the right thigh mid-
dle 1 / 3.
18. Contusion 2 1/2" x 1/4" on the front of the right thigh
I" below injury no. 17.
19. Contusion 3" x 1/4" on the right thigh just below
injury no. 18.
20. Contusion 3" x 1/4" on the right thigh 1/2" below
injury no. 19.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 13
21. Contusion 3" x 1/2" on the front of the right thigh
just above the knee joint.
22. Contusion 2" x I" on the top of the left shoulder.
23. Contusion 2" x 1/4" on the lateral surface of the left
arm upper 1 / 3.
24. Contusion 3" x I" on the back of the left forearm upper
1 13.
25. Contusion 3" x 1 1/2" on the right forearm lower 1/3.
26. Contusion 1 1/2" x I" on the back of the left wrist.
27. Contusion I" x I" on the back of the left hand.
28. Contusion 3" x I" on the front of the left thigh middle
1/3.
29. Contusion 3 1/4" x 1" on the front of the left thigh
lower 1/3.
30. Abrasion 1" x I" on the front of the left knee.
1. Multiple abrasion in an area of 2" x 1 I" on the front
of the left leg upper 1/3.,
32. Abrasion I" x I" on the front of the left leg upper 1/3
x 1" below injury no. 31.
33. Abrasion l"’ x I" on the front of the left leg lower
1/3.
34. Contusion 6" x 1" on the right side of the back upper
1/3.
35. Contusion I" x I" on the right side of the back middle
1/3.
36. Punctured wound 1/2" x I" on the left side of the back
middle 1/3 close to the mid line of the back directed
downwards and outwards.
37. Punctured wound I" x 1/4" on the left side of the back
lower 1/3 directed downwards and outwards.
Relying on the evidence of P.Ws 1, 2 and 4, the trial court
convicted the accused persons, as already noticed.
322
An appeal was preferred to the High Court by the six accused
persons against their conviction and sentence and in the
memorandum of appeal the only grounds taken were : (1) that
the conviction was bad in law; (2) that the conviction was
against the weight of evidence; and (3) that the sentence
was too severe. Death sentence on four of them was also
before that court for confirmation.
The High Court after noticing the circumstances in which the
four witnesses mentioned earlier had been discharged by the
trial court, considered it necessary to examine them itself
as court witnesses. They were examined in the High Court in
May, 1970. All of them denied having been present at the
place of the occurrence. When cross-examined, they seem to
us to have cut a very sorry figure and we consider it
impossible to place any reliance on ,their testimony.
Indeed, even the High Court, after a close scrutiny of their
evidence, came to the conclusion that the four witnesses did
not want to speak the truth and that they had not been
withheld by the prosecution for any oblique motive as
suggested on behalf of the accused persons.
The High Court accepted the evidence of P.Ws 1 and 2 with
respect to he place where Suresh Singh had been murdered but
according to it (to quote its own words) : "The question
that remains. to be decided is whether the testimony of P.W.
1 Smt. Sheela Devi and P.W. 2, Sachendra- Pratap Singh who
are the daughter and son of Suresh Singh, can be believed".
After holding the four witnesses examined by the High Court
on appeal to be untruthful, the High Court proceeded to
scrutinise the evidence of P.Ws 1 and 2. After a thorough
and detailed consideration of the criticism levelled
against their testimony by the counsel for the accused
persons, the High Court observed :
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 13
"We have therefore come to the conclusion that
there is nothing inherently imporbable in the
statement of P.W.1 Smt. Shila Devi, and P.W.
2, Sachendra Pratap Singh. We cannot,
however, ignore the fact that they are after
all the daughter and the son respectively of
the deceased Suresh Singh and are in a sense
chance witnesses. It is true that under the
law there is nothing which prevents us from
acting upon-the testimony of these two eye-
witnesses’ and unholding the conviction of the
appellants, but rules of prudence and safety
have to be taken into consideration.
Therefore, having given the matter our anxious
thought even though we hold that we find
nothing improbable in the statements of these
two eye-witnesses, we, think it proper not to
act on the uncorroborated testimony of these
witnesses. We, there-
323
fore, by the way of abundant caution give the
appellants the benefit of the doubt".
With these concluding observations the High Court allowed
the appeal of the accused persons and set aside, their
conviction. The High Court, however, also considered it
proper to issue notice under S. 497A, Cr. P.C. to Sheo
Pratap Singh son of Birju Singh who had ,been examined by
the High Court on May 11, 1970, calling upon him to show
cause why he should not be prosecuted. for perjury for
having falsely stated that he did not live in village
Isanpur and that he did not know the accused persons.
On appeal in this Court Mr. Rana appearing on behalf (I the
State of Uttar Pradesh has submitted that the High Court has
gone seriously wrong in acquitting the accused persons
merely on the ground of absence of corroboration of the
evidence of P.Ws 1 and 2 when it had itself held that there
was nothing improbable in the statements of these witnesses.
The High Court has, according to the appellant’s submission,
seriously erred in ignoring its own earlier conclusion that
the other witnesses dropped by the prosecution who were
expected to corroborate P.Ws 1 and 2, were not prepared to
speak the truth. This was a sufficiently cogent reason for
not producing them and for placing complete reliance on the
sole testimony of P.Ws 1 and 2. The observation of the High
Court that P.Ws 1 and 2 were "in a sense chance witnesses’
was wholly unjustified and is indeed contrary to the High
Court’s own earlier view accepting the testimony of P.Ws 1
and 2. On the circumstances of this case, according to the
appellant’s counsel the evidence of P.Ws 1 and 2 had been
rightly accepted by the trial court and the high Court
erroneously required further corroboration for acting upon
their evidence. The decision of the High Court, it has been
emphasised, erroneous as it is, has resulted in
In reply, Mr. Nuruddin Ahmad has with his usual persuasive
eloquence criticised the evidence of the two eye-witnesses,
P.Ws 1 and 2. While paying to these witnesses a high tribute
for their intelligence, and presence of mind and also while
endorsing the impression of the trial court that even on the
matter of minute details P.W. 2 did not get confused by his
cross-examination but gave convincing replies to the
questions, the learned counsel has argued that the high
order of intelligence of these two witnesses only serves to
explain their cleverness in putting forth a prima facie
plausible story which is far from true. According to the
learned counsel these two witnesses have made up a story
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 13
about the manner in which their father met with his death
with the sole object of falsely implicating the accused
persons who are their enemies. The submission proceeds that
neither was the deceased killed at the time stated by these
witnesses nor were they present
324
at the spot to witness their father’s murder. The deceased,
it is suggested, had also several other enemies and his
murder was in all probability committed by some other
person or persons who had their own scores to settle with
him. The children of the de’ ceased who are extremely
intelligent, have very shrewdly thought of utilising this
opportunity for getting their enemies hanged. In this
connection, the absence of any mention about the presence of
parwal at the place of occurrence or with P.Ws 1 and/or P.W.
2, in the F.I.R. or in the statements of either of the two
eyewitnesses has been very strongly emphasised by the
counsel in support of his suggestion that the whole story
about the visit of these two children of the deceased to
Rakhaha Bazar on the evening of the day, of occurrence for,
buying parwal is false and so-must, therefore, be the story
of their presence at the time and the place of the murder.
The counsel has also laid stress on the fact that there was
no point in their going so far away from their village to
buy parwal when the same could easily have been secured from
closer quarters. It has, also been suggested that a young
girl was normally. not expected to be sent for purchasing
parwal late in the evening. A passing observation was also
made to the fact that parwal were not a medicine which could
urgently be required and that the story of the witnesses’
visit to Rakhaha Bazar for this Purpose should be discarded
as concocted and unconvincing. The other criticism very
strongly pressed relates to the F.I.R. This report which is
detailed has been drafted in a form which, according to the
counsel, suggests that its author has at least some know
ledger of legal phraseology and of some sections of the
Indian Penal Code as also of the Criminal Procedure Code.
From this it is sought to be inferred that P.W. 1 who claims
to be its author, must have secured the assistance of
someone conversant with the drafting of such report and she
must, therefore, be assumed to have both time and
opportunity of concocting a story for falsely implicating
the accused persons who were the enemies of the family. A
suggestion was put to P.W. 2, the son of the deceased, and
to Head Constable Tripathi, P.W. 10, that the report had
been lodged by P.W. 1 after consulting Bhagwati Prasad but
this suggestion was’ denied by them. Still another point
has been forcefully urged by the counsel that according to
P.Ws 1 and 2 a large number of people had gone for shopping
to the Rahaha Bazar on that day and, therefore, many people
would have noticed the occurrence, if it had actually taken
place as deposed by P.Ws 1 and 2. The fact that no other
independent witness is forthcoming is, according to the
counsel. proof positive that the occurrence did not take
place at the time and the spot and in the manner deposed by
these witnesses.
Almost all these arguments were urged in the trial court and
repelled for cogent reasons with which we are in full
agreement
325
and it is, therefore, not necessary to repeat them. It is
note-worthy that the High Court also did not take a
different view on the credibility of P.Ws 1 and 2. The
absence of other witnesses from the witness box is
satisfactorily explained by the prosecution and after
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 13
recording the evidence of these witnesses as court
witnesses, the High Court also endorsed the opinion of the
prosecuting counsel that these other witnesses were not
willing to speak the truth.
In our view, the High Court has gravely erred in acquitting
the accused persons and indeed its judgment has resulted in
grave failure of justice. The trial court had taken great
pains in fully scrutinising and properly evaluating the
evidence of P.Ws 1 and 2 and after applying the correct
principles governing the appreciation of the evidence of a
child witness it has accepted the evidence of these two
witnesses as true. All the arguments urged on behalf of the
accused were duly considered and repelled. The High Court
on appeal devoted a major part of its judgment to the
consideration of the additional evidence recorded by it.
Feeling wholly unimpressed by this evidence, it endorsed the
view of the prosecuting agency that these witnesses were not
produced in court because they were not prepared to speak
the truth and indeed felt constrained to issue notice under
section 479A, Cr. P. C. to one of them to show cause as to
why he should not be prosecuted for perjury. It disagreed
with all the main arguments urged on behalf of the accused
persons for discrediting the testimony of P.Ws Land 2, but
curiously enough, acquitted the accused persons on the view-
which we must confess is not easy to appreciate-that P.Ws 1
and 2 being closely related to the deceased and being in a
sense chance witnesses, their evidence without corroboration
did not prove the guilt of the accused beyond reasonable
doubt. We are not able to endorse this view which seeing to
us to be both unreasonable and not supportable on the
material on record. Once P.Ws 1 and 2 are held to be
trustworthy, witnesses then there does not seem to be any
cogent reason for not acting upon their evidence. The fact
that the other persons who were present at the spot and had
witnessed the occurrence have, without any good reason and,
perhaps with oblique motive, chosen not to state the truth
in court and thereby to obstruct the course of justice
would, in our opinion, provide a sound reason for accepting
the testimony of P.Ws 1 and 2 for sustaining the conviction
of the accused persons. To decline to act upon the
testimony of these witnesses merely because of the absence
of other witnesses to corroborate them in court, is to
defeat the cause of justice in this case. It is wholly
unreasonable for the High Court to dub P.Ws 1 and 2 as
chance witnesses : we find no cogent material on the record
to support this observation. Indeed this, observation
ignores and to
326
an extent runs counter to the High Court’s own earlier line
of reasoning. There is, we think, absolutely no
justification for the view that their testimony leaves any
scope for reasonable doubt about the complicity of the
accused persons. Because of their relationship with the
deceased they cannot be considered to be inclined to spare
the real assailants for falsely involving the accused
persons .and indeed in the circumstances of this case there
is hardly any scope for such a hypothesis. To us there
appears an intrinsic ring ,of truth in the statements of the
two eye-witnesses which disclose no infirmity. There is no
general. rule that the evidence of the relations of the
deceased must be corroborated for securing the ,conviction
of the offender. Each case depends on. its own facts and
circumstances. In the present case the straightforward
nature ,of the deposition of these two witnesses and the
fact that they were undoubtedly in a position to identify
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 13
the assailants of their father coupled with the recovery of
blood-stained earth from the place of occurrence leave no
reasonable doubt about the guilt of the accused persons.
The High Court has clearly taken an unreason,able and
erroneous vie which is not warranted by the material ,on the
record and has reversed the judgment of the trial court on
grounds which are manifestly fallacious and untenable.
Relying ,on P.Ws 1 and 2 and the attending circumstances of
the case we are constrained to allow the appeal and setting
aside the judgment of the High Court, convict the six
respondents in this Court for the offences they were charged
with and convicted by the trial court.
The next question which arises relates to that of sentence.
This is a matter which requires the exercise of sound
judicial discretion. After the amendment of sec. 367, Cr.
P.C. in 1955, it is no longer necessary to assign reasons
for awarding the lesser penalty in the ,case of conviction
for the offence of murder. The Court is now free in its
discretion to award any one of the two sentences prescribed
by S. 302, I.P.C. The trial court had of course imposed
capital sentence on four accused persons and life
imprisonment on two. Of these two, one was shown leniency
because he was a budding lawyer and the other-because of
being young. We consider it proper to record our inability
to appreciate the leniency shown in the case of a budding
lawyer who, because of his education and profession was, in
our opinion, expected to exercise restraining influence on
his associates rather than allow himself to be misled into
being a party to such gruesome murder. Those who live by
the law are expected to abide by the law and not violate it
by voluntarily participating in violent crimes like murder
motivated by personal animosity. His participation in the
present crime should, in our opinion, have been considered
as an aggravating rather than an extenuating circumstance.
It is indeed incon-
327
gruous to contend that success in legal profession by itself
miti-gates the culpability of the guilty lawyer. However.,
since now this Court has to determine the proper sentence to
be imposed after converting the acquittal into conviction,
in our opinion, in view of the facts that (i) the murder was
committed as far back as 1968; (ii) on conviction by the
trial court on September 1, 1969, the accused were sentenced
to death with the result that till their acquittal by the
High Court the shadow of death because of the capital
sentence must have haunted them; (iii) they were acquitted
(though wrongly) by the High Court as far back as May, 1970;
and (iv) it is not possible to assign with certainty the
fatal blows on the vulnerable parts of the body of the
deceased to any particular accused person or persons, it
would meet the ends of justice if we sentence them all to
imprisonment for life. We are not unmindful of the facts
that the murder was really gruesome and cowardly and the
accused being highly influential persons, had also
apparently successfully influenced and dissuaded a number of
eyewitnesses from stating the truth in court, but keeping in
view all’ the considerations already mentioned, we feel that
the more appropriate sentence in this case would be that of
life imprisonment on all the six respondents. The
conviction and sentence for the theft of the gun as imposed
by the trial court is also restored. The sentences on Paras
Nath Singh are to be concurrent. The appeal is accordingly
allowed in the terms just stated.
V.P.S. Appeal allowed.
328
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 13 of 13