Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 4
PETITIONER:
SHEIKH ABDUL HAMID AND ANOTHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 04/02/1998
BENCH:
G.T. NANAVATI, V.N. KHARE
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G E M E N T
V. N. KHARE, J
This criminal appeal is directed against the judgment
dated 30.497 of the Madhya Pradesh high Court in Criminal
Appeal No. 1712 of 1996 whereby the High court has upheld
the conviction of the appellants under Sections 302/34 IPC
and further confirmed the death sentence awarded to them by
the trial court.
The prosecution case in brief, is like this:
Accused appellant No. 1 Shaikh Abdul Hameed is the
husband of deceased Mst. Manglibi @ Kaniza. Deceased
Samidabi, the daughter of Manglibi for her former husband.
Deceased Rafeeq, aged about 14 months, was the son of
accused-appellant No. 1 and deceased Manglibi. Ashiq Ali,
co-accused -appellant No. 2 is a friend of appellant No. 1
and he after release from prison was living with appellant
No. 1 in the Dhaba.
In the Year 1989, deceased Manglibi after purchasing a
small plot of land on high way No.7 constructed a Dhaba
where she started business of sale of refreshment. Appellant
No.1 , deceased Manglibi, deceased daughter Shamidabi and
son Rafeeq - all were living in the said Dhaba. On 13.11.92,
Qadir Khan (PW 9) had lodged a report to the police station
Chaprra, that his elder sister Manglibi, along with her
children had disappeared or not traceable for 2 1/2 months
and he suspected that appellant No. 1 either killed or sold
them. This report later on came to be registered as the
First Information Report. On that report the prosecution
machinery was set in motion. the Police after permission
from the Sub-divisional magistrate exhumed the dead bodies
by digging the earths in the inner room of the Dhaba.
Consequently, charges under Sections 302/34 IPC were framed
against the accused appellants. The trial court being of the
opinion that there were cogent circumstantial evidence
available on record to conclude that it were the appellants
who alone have committed the murder of the three deceased
persons, convicted each of them for offence under Sections
302/34 IPC and sentenced them to death. The trial court made
references of the death sentence awarded to the appellants
for confirmation before the High court. The appellants also
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 4
filed appeal before the High Court. The appellants also
filed appeal before the High Court against their conviction
and sentences awarded to them. The High Court by the
impugned judgment under appeal upheld the judgment of the
trial court and confirmed the death sentences awarded to the
appellants. That is how the matter has come up before us.
It was urged on behalf of the appellants that in the
present case, the chain of circumstantial evidence is not
complete as to convict the appellants. Therefore, the
conviction recorded against the appellants deserved to be
set aside.
It is not disputed that the present case is based on
circumstantial evidence. it is also not disputed that the
settled law is that in a case like the present one the chain
of circumstances must be unbroken as to rule out all and
every possibilities of innocence of the accused. The trial
court as well as the high Court found that the evidence
available on record clearly established all the links in the
Chain of circumstances leading to the guilt of the
appellants and no reasonable ground was left for conclusion
consistent with their innocence.
It is true that in the present case, there was no
eyewitness of the murder of the three deceased persons and
the prosecution case was based only on circumstantial
evidence. It may be noted that the circumstances established
in the present case speak for themselves and candidly point
out that it were the appellants who committed the murder of
the three deceased persons. As noticed earlier, the
prosecution machinery in this case was set in motion only
after 2-1/2 months of the incident and only on the report of
Qadir Khan brother of the deceased Manglibi, wherein he had
stated that his sister Shamidabi and her children had not
been seen in their Dhaba for 2 1/2 months and he suspected
some foul play. This shows that the appellants, although
were living in the Dhaba with the deceased persons, did not
take any interest to find out whereabouts of the deceased
persons, but, on the contrary, happily continued to run the
Dhaba. After the report of Qadir Khan came to be registered
as First Information Report, the police at the instance of
appellant No. 1, found the dead bodies of the three deceased
persons buried in the inner room of the Dhaba. The police
also found that the inner room of the Dhaba where the dead
bodies were buried, was locked and its key was found with
appellant No. 1. After the door was opened, the dead bodies
were then exhumed by digging the earth.
Dr. K.K. Dwivedi and Dr. H.P. Pateria after conducting
autopsy on the dead bodies found that deaths were homicidal
in nature and were caused about eight weeks prior to the
date of post mortem. It was also found that the first body
was wrapped in a blue sari and had bangles on her wrists.
Signs of injuries on the body were found present. According
to Dr. Pateria death occurred on account of injuries on the
Chest affecting vital organs like heart. The second body was
of a young female clad in a green salwar kurta and bangles
on her wrists. She suffered injuries on her neck and cheat
affecting vital organs. The post mortem report of the child
indicated that he had injuries over the skull. According to
Dr. Pateria, all these injuries caused to the three deceased
were by sharp object like Basula which was found kept under
the bench in the inner room of Dhaba, and they were ante
mortem. These dead-bodies were identified by appellant No. 1
as well as by Habib Khan and Mohd. Iqbal. The medical
evidence shows that deaths, seeing the condition of the
bodies, must have been occurred about eight weeks before the
post mortem examination held on 14.11.92. Thus, it points
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 4
out the date of incident somewhere in the first fortnight or
September, 1992. It is not disputed that the accused were
living in the Dhaba with the deceased who were not seen
since first week of September, 1992. Accused No. 1, who was
the husband of Manglibi and father of Rafeeq did not show
any interest to find out the whereabouts of the deceased and
continued to run the Dhaba. From these circumstances, the
High Court concluded that there was no possibility of any
outsider committing the murders, as no outsider would have
committed the murder of these three deceased persons and
buried them in the Dhaba. This conclusion of the High Court
drawn on the basis of proved and established circumstances,
according to us, is correct on the facts and circumstances
of the case. Had any outsider committed the murder of these
three deceased persons, he could have thrown the dead bodies
somewhere in the lonely place and surely would not have
under taken the risk of burying the dead bodies in the inner
room of the Dhaba. The situation of the room in the Dhaba
also indicated that t was accessible only to the appellants
who were living therein and no outsider had access to it. it
was therefore not at all possible for any outsider to have
killed the three persons and brought their bodies to Dhaba
to be buried in the inner room of the Dhaba.. These
circumstances further show that at least more than one
person were required to commit such crime as the same was
not possible by one person to commit murder of three persons
and buried them in the inner room of the Dhaba.
We have considered the circumstantial evidence in this
case and find that all the links of chain of circumstances
are unbroken and complete. We are, therefore, of the opinion
that circumstantial evidence is consistent with the guilt of
the two accused. The only conclusion form the established
circumstances in the case before us is that it were the
appellants who committed the murder of three deceased
persons and were rightly convicted.
How, coming to the death sentence awarded to the
appellants which was confirmed by the High Court, it may be
noted that under sub-section (3) of Section 354 Cr. P.C.
When the conviction is for an offence punishable with death
or in the alternative, with an imprisonment for life, the
Court is required to state reasons for sentence awarded, and
in case of sentence of death, the special reasons for such
sentence are to be give. thus, under the provisions of Code
of Criminal Procedure, life imprisonment for the offence of
murder is the rule and death sentence is an exception to be
resorted to for special reasons to be recorded by the Court.
This court in a number of decisions has laid down guide
lines when the extreme penalty of death sentence is to be
awarded. (Sec] Bachan Singh Vs. State of Punjab (1980) 2 SCC
684, Machhi Singh & others vs. State of Punjab (1983 (3) SCC
476]. In these cases it was pointed out that death penalty
could be awarded in a rarest or fare cases and the
circumstance, when the murder is committed in an extremely
brutal, grotesque, diabolical, revolting or dastardly
manner, so as to arouse intense and extreme indignation of
the community would fail within the category of rarest of
rare cases.
Special reasons given by the trial court in awarding
death sentence to the appellants and confirmed by the High
court, were that it was such a cruel act where the
appellants have not even spared the innocent child and the
motive being to grab the property. We have given out earnest
consideration to the question of sentence and the reasons
given by the High court for awarding death sentence to the
appellants. Having regard to the guidelines stated above, it
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 4
may be noticed that in the present case it was not pointed
out bey the prosecution that it was a cold blooded murder.
There is nothing on record to show how the murder has taken
place. In the absence of such evidence, we do not find that
the case before us falls within the category of rarest of
rare cases, deserving extreme penalty of death. Keeping in
view the afforested facts, we are of the view that the ends
of justice would be met if we substitute t he death sentence
with that of life imprisonment under Sections 302/34 IPC,
while upholding the appellants’ conviction, as recorded by
the High Court.
This appeal is, accordingly, allowed in part, only to
the extent that the death sentence passed against the
appellants under Sections 302/34 IPC is set aside, and,
instead, the appellants are sentenced to undergo
imprisonment for life. since we upheld the conviction of the
appellants under Sections 302/34 IPC., appeal to that extent
stands dismissed.