Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MAHABIR GOPE
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF BIHAR
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
04/05/1962
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SUBBARAO, K.
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
CITATION:
1963 AIR 118 1963 SCR (3) 331
ACT:
Criminal Law--Life convict quilty of constructive
murder--Sentence of death--Legality--Indian Penal Code, 1860
(Act 45 of 1860) ss. 34, 149, 302, 303.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant along with eleven others was charged and tried
for offences under ss. 147, 302 read with s.34 of the Indian
Penal Code. The prosecution alleged that these twelve
persons formed themselves into an unlawful assembly and in
prosecution of their common object committed the offence of
rioting armed with deadly weapons assaulted the Chief Head
Warder and Watchmen and some of the member in prosecution of
the common object caused the death of the Chief Warder.
Since the appellant was undergoing sentence of imprisonment
for life there was a further charge under s.303 of the
Indian Penal Code against him. The trial court convicted
all the accused for the offences for which they were
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charged and acting under s.303 sentenced the appellant to
death.
The apellant thereupon appealed to the High Court and the
sentence of death imposed on him was also referred to the
High Court. The High Court confirmed the sentence of death
and dismissed the appeal. The present appeal was filed by
way of special leave granted by this Court.
The main contention in the appeal was that s.303 can apply
only to a case where a person while undergoing imprisonment
for life himself commits a murder and becomes liable to be
convicted under s. 302 without recourse to constructive
liability under s. 34.
Held, that if two or more persons acting in concert in
pursuance of a pre-arranged plan proceed to commit an
offence s. 34 steps in and provides that for the act
committed by one the other is liable in the same manner as
if it had been done by him alone. That being the effect of
the rule prescribed under s. 34 it is difficult to accept
the argument that where a person has been convicted under
section 302/34 it cannot be said that he has committed an
offence of murder. The position would not be any different
even if the appellant had been convicted under s.302/149.
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Section 303 would apply even in cases where a person
undergoing sentence of imprisonment for life is convicted
either under s. 302 read with s. 34 or under s. 302 read
with s. 149.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPElLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeal No. 76 of
1962.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated December 22, 1961,
of the Patna High Court in Criminal Appeal No. 118 of 1961
and death Reference No. 2 of 1961.
M. S. K. Sastri for the appellant,
D. P. Singh and D. Gupta, for the respondent.
1962. May 4. The judgment of the Court was delivered by
GAJENDRAGADKAR, J.-The appellant Mahabir Gope along with
eleven other persons was charged before the First Additional
Sessions Judge, Bhagalpur with having committed offences
under ss.147
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and 302 read with a. 34 of the Indian Penal Code. The
prosecution case was that on or about the 12th day of June,
1959, the appellant and the other accused persons formed
themselves into an unlawful assembly at Bhagalpur Special
Central Jail and in prosecution of the common object of the
said assembly, Rambilash Singh, the Chief Head Warder
Mohammed Ilyas and Panchand Panjiare, the night Watchmen,
were assaulted. That is how an offence under s.147 was
committed by the members of the said unlawful assembly.
The prosecution case further was that on or about the said
date and at the same place, in prosecution of the common
object of the said assembly, the members of the assembly had
committed an offence of rioting with deadly weapons while
the Chief Head Warder and the two night Watchmen were
assaulted, and thereby all the members of the assembly
rendered themselves liable to be punished under s. 148 of
the Indian Penal Code.
The third charge- framed against the members of the unlawful
assembly was that in furtherance of the’ common object of
the said assembly, Rambilash Singh was intentionally
assaulted by some of the members of the assembly with a view
to cause his death and that made all the members of the
assembly liable under s.302/34 I.P.C.
Against the appellant, an additional charge was framed under
s.303, I.P.C. Under this charge, the prosecution case was
that since the appallent had committed an offence punishable
under s.302/34 whilst he was undergoing sentence of
imprisonment for life, he rendered himself liable to be
punished only with death under s. 303.
The learned trial Judge has convicted the appellant of the
offences charged and acting under s.303, has sentenced him
to death. For the purpose
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of this appeal, it is unnecessary to refer to the findings
made by the learned trial Judge in regard to the prosecution
case against the other members of the unlawful assembly.
The appellant challenged the correctness of the order of
conviction and sentence thus passed against him by
preferring an appeal in the High Court at Patna. The
sentence of death imposed on him was also referred to the
High Court for confirmation. The High Court has confirmed
the sentence of death and dismissed the appeal preferred by
the appellant. It is against this order that the appellant
has come to this Court by special leave; and the only point
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on which special leave has been granted is in regard to the
scope and effect of the provisions of s.303 of the Indian
Penal Code. That is how the narrow point which arises for
our decision is whether the case of the appellant who has
been convicted under s.302/34 in the present case falls
under s. 303.
Mr. M.S.K. Sastri for the appellant contends that s. 303 can
apply only to a case where an accused person who is already
undergoing a sentence of imprisonment for life commits
murder and is convicted of it. He emphasises the fact that
s.303 can be applied only where at the subsequent trial, the
prisoner is found to have committed another murder. The
expression "commits murder" used in s. 303 implies that the
prisoner must have himself committed the murder and thus
became liable to be convicted under s.302 without recourse
to s.34; and since in the present case, the appellant has
been convicted not because it is found that be himself
committed the murder of Rambilash Singh, but he has been
found constructively guilty of murder and is convicted under
s. 302/34 on the ground that the said murder had been
committed in furtherance of the common intention of all the
accused persons.
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It is true that the courts below have convicted the
appellant under s.302/34 and it is in the light of the said
conviction that the point raised by Mr. Sastri has to be
considered.
For the purpose of s. 303, when can it be said that a person
has committed a murder? Is it necessary that a person must
be proved to have himself committed the murder before s. 303
can be invoked against him, or would it be enough if it is
shown that the person is constructively guilty of murder
under s.302/34 ? The appellant’s argument seeks to derive
support from the fact that both ss. 299 and 300 refer to a
specific act. Section 299, for instance, provides that
whoever causes death by doing an act with the intention or
knowledge therein specified, commits the offence of culpable
homicide. In other words, it is the act done with the
requisite intention or knowledge that constitutes the
offence of culpable homicide. Similarly, s.300 provides
that if the act by which the death is caused is done with
the intention of causing death or with the intention or
knowledge as specified in the three clauses of s. 300,
culpable homicide is murder. That again shows that it is
the specified act which amounts to murder, and so, unless
the act which amounts to murder has been committed by a
person himself, it cannot be said that he has committed
murder under s. 303. That, in substance, is the argument
urged before us by the appellant.
In appreciating the validity of this argument, it is
necessary to bear in mind the effect of the provisions of s.
34. Section 34 provides that when a criminal act is done by
several persons in furtherance of the common intention of
all, each of such persons is liable for that act in the same
manner as if it were done by him alone. It is thus clear
that as a result of the application of the principle
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enunciated in s. 31, when the appellant was convicted under
302/34, in law it really meant that the appellant was liable
for the act which caused the death of Rambilash Singh in the
same manner as if it had been done by him alone, That if;
the effect of the constructive liability which follows from
the application of the principle laid down in s. 34. Section
34 embodies the ordinary commonsense principle that if two
or more persons intentionally commit an offence jointly, in
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substance, it is just the same as if each one of them bad
committed that offence. Common intention which is the basis
of the principle laid down by s. 34 implies action-in-
concert and that in its turn, postulates the existence of a
prearranged plan. Therefore, if two or more persons acting
in concert in pursuance of a pre-arranged plan proceed to
commit an offence, s. 34 steps in and provides that for the
act committed by one the other is liable in the same manner
as if it had been done by him alone. That being the effect
of the rule prescribed by s. 34, it is difficult to accept
the argument that where a person has been convicted under s.
302/34, it cannot be said that he has committed the offence
of murder. The act which caused the death of the victim may
have been committed by another person, but since the said
act had been done by the other person in furtherance of the
common intention shared by that person and the appellant, in
law, the act must be deemed to have been committed by the
appellant alone. Therefore, where a person is convicted
under s. 302/34, it must be held that he has committed the
murder as much as the person by whose act the victim was
killed.
The position would not be any different even if the
appellant bad been convicted under s.302/149. Section 149
provides that if an offence is committed by any member of an
unlawful assembly in prosecution of the common object of
that assembly, or such as the members of that assembly
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knew to be likely to be committed in prosecution of that
object, every person who, at the time of the committing of
that offence, is a member of the same assembly. is guilty of
that offence. It is true that the basis of constructive
liability imposed by s. 149 is mere membership of the
unlawful assembly, whereas the basis of the constructive
liability contemplated by s. 34 is participation in the same
action with the common intention of committing a crime.
’.that, however, does not make any difference in the legal
position that if a murder is committed by one member of an
unlawful assembly in prosecution of the common object of
that assembly, all members of the unlawful assembly who at
the time of the commission of that offence were members of
such assembly would be guilty of the offence of murder. In
such a case, again, where a person is convicted under
s.302/149, the true legal position is that, in law, he must
be deemed to have committed the murder as much as the actual
murderer has. Therefore, in our opinion, s. 303 cannot be
confined only to cases where a person undergoing sentence of
imprisonment for life actually and in fact himself commits
an act which results in the death of the victim. The said
section would apply oven in oases where a person undergoing
sentence of imprisonment for life is convicted either under
a. 302 read with s. 34 or under s. 302 read with a. 149.
That being our view, we must held that the courts below were
right in sentencing the appellant to death under s. 303.
The result is, the appeal fails and is dismissed.
Appeal dismissed,
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