Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 216 of 2002
PETITIONER:
PRITAM NATH & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF PUNJAB
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 01/08/2002
BENCH:
DORAISWAMY RAJU], SHIVARAJ V. PATIL.
JUDGMENT:
Shivaraj V. Patil J.
In this appeal, by special leave, the appellants
have assailed the judgment of the High Court reversing
the order of acquittal made in their favour by the
trial court and convicting them under Section 304-II of
the Indian Penal Code and sentencing them to undergo
rigorous imprisonment for ten years and to pay a fine
of Rs.5,000/- each.
The prosecution case, briefly stated, is that PW-2
Ram Charan and Vidya Rani, the deceased, had been
married about 18 years prior to the incident. At about
6/7 P.M. on 4th August, 1989, Ram Charan took his
wife to the dera of the appellants situated in village
Sahera for getting her treated from the evil spirits,
which had seized her. Kewal Nath, a co-accused, and
Pritam Nath, appellant No. 1, claimed to be Sadhus in
the said dera and the appellants Nos. 2 and 3, viz.,
Pritam Singh and Raghbir Singh, were their chelas, who
were all present there. PW-2 Ram Charan told them that
his wife had been seized by evil spirits and requested
them to help and treat her, whereupon these appellants
and Kewal Nath, the co-accused, tied Vidya Rani to a
tree and started giving blows with iron rods, trishul
and chimtas on various parts of her body. Witnessing
the same for some time PW-2 got alarmed and tried to
intervene telling them that the treatment might kill
her. The accused, however, assured him that Vidya Rani
would not die. However, she became unconscious during
the night. The next day at about 1.00 P.M., PW-2 came
to know that his wife had been died. Then he raised a
roula, which attracted Bhagwan Singh, Balbir Singh,
Bhola Ram and Surinder Singh. Then he left for the
police station, Mulepur with Bhola Ram and Surinder
Singh and reached there at about 2.00 P.M. In the
police station his statement Ex. PD was recorded and
further investigation was taken up. After completion
of the investigation challan was filed. They were
tried by the sessions court for the offences under
Section 302 read with Section 34 IPC.
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After trial the learned sessions judge, for the
reasons recorded in the judgment, held that the
prosecution failed in its efforts to prove the case
against the accused beyond reasonable doubt and
consequently acquitted them. The State filed appeal in
the High Court challenging the order of acquittal
passed by the trial court. The High Court found fault
with the order of acquittal and held accused guilty of
the offence under Section 304 Part-II read with Section
34 IPC. Hence they were convicted and sentenced as
already stated above.
The learned counsel for the appellants strongly
contended that the High Court was not right in
reversing the order of acquittal adopting an approach
contrary to well-settled position in law as expressed
in various pronouncements of this Court. The order of
acquittal did not call for interference as it was not
based on a misreading of evidence or otherwise
perverse. Merely because the High Court could perhaps
take a different view was not a ground for disturbing
the judgment of acquittal. The learned counsel further
pointed out that there was delay of 18 hours in lodging
the FIR for which there was no proper explanation
although Ram Charan claimed to have been an eye witness
to the incident; there were serious contradictions and
omissions in the statements of witnesses; PW-2 was the
only so called eye witness, whose evidence was
unreliable and unsafe to convict the appellants as
rightly recorded by the trial court giving various
reasons for not relying on his evidence; the High Court
lightly brushed aside the reasons given by the trial
court for acquitting the appellants.
In opposition, the learned counsel for the State
made submissions supporting the impugned judgment
adopting the reasons given in the impugned judgment.
We have carefully considered the submissions made
by the learned counsel for the parties. The
sustainability of the impugned judgment is to be tested
on the basis of crystalised judicial view and
repeatedly pronounced principles as to the scope and
ambit of disturbing or reversing an order of acquittal
recorded by a trial court.
In this case, mainly the conviction of the
appellants was sought on the basis of sole testimony of
PW-2 Ram Charan, the husband of the deceased. The
learned sessions Judge was aware that there was no
legal bar for convicting an accused on the solitary
testimony of an eye witness provided the same was
unimpeachable and suffered from no infirmities and was
corroborated by independent circumstances in the shape
of medical evidence and other evidence. Judging by
that standard after the scrutiny of statement of PW-2
the trial court held that his evidence was not reliable
to act upon for the reasons recorded in its judgment,
which read: -
"The witness states that the accused
were lifting the weapons wielded by
them, namely iron, trishul and chimta
which have been heated up in the Dhooni
but this part of the statement is an
improvement upon the statement made by
this witness under Section 61 of the
Code of Civil Procedure which does not
indicate that the weapons were being
lifted from the Dhooni before giving
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injuries to the deceased. While
improvement on a non vital issue may be
overlooked but when a prosecution
witness makes an improvement on an
aspect to which is material for the
case, the courts are reluctant to rely
upon such an improvement and normally
reject the same. In the case in hand,
the improved version was put forth to
corroborate the medical evidence
available in the postmortem report which
indicated presence of a large number of
burn wounds. As the improvement is on a
very material aspect of the case, I am
afraid that the same would have to be
ruled out of consideration. Another
portion of testimony of Ram Charan which
does not stand closer scrutiny is the
assertion regarding Vidya Rani being
tied up with a rope to a sheesham tree.
In the postmortem report, there are no
marks on the dead body indicating that
the deceased had been tied up and so
this part of the story too has to be
ruled out of consideration. Looked at
from another angle too, the part of the
testimony of Ram Charan which asserts
that the injuries were caused to Vidya
Rani with hot weapons is rendered
unreliable because although there are
burn injuries present on the dead body
yet the clothes of the deceased do not
have any corresponding burns and in this
state of affairs the court cannot but
infer that Ram Charan was either not
present when injuries were caused to the
wife or that he is withholding the
details thereof which too would not help
in any way to enhance the reliability of
the testimony of this witness.
Having come to the conclusion that
the statement of Ram Charan regarding
the manner in which the injuries were
caused to Vidya Rani is unreliable, I
may turn to another aspect of the case
in which the conduct of the witness at
the time when his wife being caused
injuries has to be gone into. Ram
Charan asserts that after taking Vidya
Rani to the Dera of Kewal Nath for
treatment of evil spirits she tied with
sheesham tree and beaten up with hot
chimta, trishul and iron rod. He also
asserted that when the accused started
causing injuries to the deceased he
called upon them to desist from doing so
as though may endanger the life of Vidya
Rani. He also asserted that he was
unable to interfere because of a threat
which has been held out by the accused
to him. This conduct of the husband to
say the least appears to be highly
unnatural for once he apprehended danger
to the life of his wife he would have
raised a hue and cry and either
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intervened to prevent the causing of
further injuries to her or at least
would have gone to the neighbouring
village and sought assistance for
rescuing the lady. Ram Charan did not
respond in this manner and this part of
his conduct when scrutinized in the
light of the fact that his statement
regarding the actual incident has
already been held by me to be unreliable
renders this part of his testimony also
untrustworthy. We thus have a case in
which the testimony of the solitary eye
witness does not come up to the mark and
is replete with infirmities which cannot
be overlooked. Taken in its entirety it
has to be held that Ram Charan is not a
witness of truth and his statement
regarding the circumstances in which his
wife is alleged to have met her end is
totally unreliable."
Referring to the recoveries, which were stated to
have been made at the instance of Kewal Nath, the co-
accused, who is not before this Court in this appeal,
the learned sessions Judge observed that the recovery
of iron rod, chimta and trishul by themselves would not
in any way help the court to fasten criminal liability
on the accused. It may be added that weapons were not
even recovered from these appellants.
The High Court in the impugned judgment has opined
that the findings recorded by the trial court were
palpably erroneous and could not have been given on the
evidence that has been led by the prosecution, that too
without re-appreciating and objectively evaluating or
scrutinizing the evidence of witnesses. The High Court
states, "It is true that in the FIR Ram Charan did not
mention that the weapons wielded by the accused had
first been heated before Vidya Rani had been beaten but
the basic fact remains that he had clearly stated that
she had been given a severe beating with the weapons.
The omission to state that the weapons had been heated,
to our mind, is of little consequence in the light of
the fact that Ram Charan could not possibly have
anticipated that what he believed to be a simple
treatment for his wife’s problem would end in her
tragic death. It is also true that the FIR had been
lodged after a delay of 18 hours but in the background
of the case, this fact by itself pales into
insignificance."
A perusal of the judgment of the High Court shows
that there is no reference to the statements of the
witnesses at least on material aspects of the
prosecution case. The judgment contains narration as
to prosecution story, arguments of the learned counsel
and reproduction of injuries found on the deceased
running into four pages, the reasons and discussion is
only found in one paragraph and portion from the said
paragraph is already extracted above. In the
penultimate paragraph the High Court only states that
the case of murder was not spelt out as there was no
intention on the part of the accused to cause death but
they could be safely attributed with the knowledge that
death could be caused in such a situation and as such
convicted them for offence punishable under Section
304-II, IPC.
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In our view the approach of the High Court and
consideration of the case that too for reversal of the
order of acquittal has been unsatisfactory and if we
may say so it has been casual. The High Court did not
consider the case before it, as it ought to have been
by a court of first appeal on facts. The High Court
did not dislodge the reasons given by trial court for
acquittal. Further the evidence was neither discussed
nor scrutinized nor analysed to show how the trial
court was wrong in appreciating the evidence,
considering the probabilities of the case and recording
findings.
There was delay of 18 hours in lodging the FIR, no
ligature marks were found on the body of the deceased
as against the prosecution story that the deceased was
tied to a tree with rope and that was the position
through out the night; no burn marks were found on the
clothes of the deceased as is evident from the
statement of PW-8, the Investigating Officer, though
there were several burn injuries on the body of the
deceased as per the prosecution; the body was not
identified by PW-2 Ram Charan, the husband of the
deceased at the place of the occurrence or at inquest
raising serious doubts about his presence itself. PW-1,
the doctor, in his evidence has stated that when he
gave opinion on 6.8.1989, the weapons stated to have
been seized were not shown to him by the police; the
weapons when produced were not sealed; on them the name
of the accused, case number and name of the deceased
were not mentioned. PW-2, the sole eye witness, in his
evidence has stated that when police went to the spot
with him all these weapons were lying at the spot and
were taken into possession. PW-8, the Investigating
Officer, has deposed that the weapons were recovered on
12.8.1989 at the instance of co-accused Kewal Nath, who
is not before us in this appeal. The rope with which
the deceased was alleged to have been tied to the tree
was also not recovered. These infirmities gave rise to
serious doubts as to the prosecution case and
involvement of the appellants in the commission of the
offence. When the material contradictions and
omissions and improvements in the evidence of PW-2 were
found and there was no corroboration to his evidence by
other independent witnesses, it was fatal to the
prosecution case. The trial court was right in not
relying on his evidence.
No interference by the High Court in such an
appeal was called for or warranted when the reasons
given by the trial court for recording acquittal are
good and sturdy. The trial court had the advantage and
benefit of observing during the trial the demur and
conduct of the witnesses from its commencement to
completion and with that background on proper and
objective appreciation of the evidence as a whole
recorded a finding of acquittal supported by reasons.
The High Court could not upset an order of acquittal as
if it was another trial court to record conviction
forgetting that it was sitting in first appeal against
an order of acquittal. The High Court failed to keep
in its mind the well-settled principles in the matter
of reversing an order of acquittal.
Assuming one other view was possible to be taken
by the High Court, that was not enough in the light of
well-settled position in law. In this case, having
regard to the discussion made and reasons given by the
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trial court, extracted above, it cannot be said that
the appreciation of evidence was perverse or arbitrary
or findings recorded were based on no evidence or
material evidence was not considered. The High Court,
in our view, committed a grave error in convicting and
sentencing the accused, reversing the order of
acquittal merely because it could take a different
view. In a case like this it is the duty of this Court
to interfere with the impugned judgment and order so as
to do substantial justice.
In the result for the reasons stated above the
impugned judgment of the High Court is set aside, that
of the trial court is restored and the appellants be
set at liberty forthwith, if they are not required in
any other case. The appeal is ordered accordingly.