Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 113 of 2002
PETITIONER:
RAJINDER CHANDRA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF CHHATTISGARH & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 24/01/2002
BENCH:
R.C. Lahoti & Brijesh Kumar
JUDGMENT:
R.C. Lahoti, J.
Leave granted.
Pranjal Tiwari, the accused respondent No.2, has been
apprehended on 27.2.1997 for an offence under Section 302/34 IPC
committed on the same day. The accused claimed himself to be a
juvenile as having not attained the age of 16 years and, therefore,
entitled to the benefit of the Juvenile Justice Act, 1986. An enquiry
was held. The learned Judicial Magistrate First Class and the Sessions
Court held the accused not to be a juvenile. The accused preferred a
revision in the High Court which has been allowed. The orders
impugned before the High Court have been quashed and the accused
has been held to be a juvenile. The complainant, father of the victim
in the incident, has preferred this appeal by special leave.
At the enquiry, on behalf of the accused, mark sheets of Class
VIII and High School, birth certificate, horoscope and entry in Kotwar
Book were tendered in documentary evidence. In all of these
documents, the date of birth of the accused is entered as 30.9.1981. In
oral evidence, Savita Tiwari, PW1, mother of the accused, Gopal
Tiwari, PW2, father of the accused, Vinod Kumar Mishra, PW3, Head
Master of Saraswati Shishu Mandir, where the accused took his
primary education, R.S. Nayak, PW4, Assistant Teacher of the High
School where the accused had taken subsequent education and
whereat his date of birth was entered into records on the basis of
transfer certificate issued by Saraswati Shishu Mandir, Uttam Kumar
Soni, PW5, Assistant Teacher, Examination Centre, Government
Basic School, Kota, who proved the mark sheets and Hari Shankar
Tandon, Kotwar, who brought the birth and death register wherein the
factum of birth of the accused is recorded, were examined. The
learned Magistrate and the learned Sessions Judge scrutinized the
evidence adduced on behalf of the accused by applying the principle
that it was the accused who was claiming the benefit of the Juvenile
Justice Act, and therefore the onus lay on him to prove that he was a
juvenile and in as much as the oral and documentary evidence
adduced by him left open room for doubt, the onus could not be said
to have been discharged. The accused was also subjected to
radiological examination. In ossification test report, he was opined to
be of 15-16 years of age. The learned Sessions Judge, by reference to
Modi’s Medical Jurisprudence, held that a variation of 2 to 3 years on
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either side was permissible in the result of ossification test, and
therefore, on the basis of such test no definite opinion could be
formed.
The High Court, in exercise of its revisional jurisdiction, found
the findings arrived at by the learned Sessions Judge and the
Magistrate to be legally infirm and hence not sustainable. The High
Court noticed that although in the marks sheet of Class VIII there
appeared to be some over writing on the year 1981 but the same was
attested by the officer who had issued it. Moreover the date of birth
was entered in figures and words both. While in the figures there was
an over writing but there was no over writing in the words wherein the
date was clearly mentioned as "thirtieth September nineteen eighty
one" and, therefore, there was no room for doubt. In the birth and
death register kept by Kotwar, there was some doubt whether the date
of birth was recorded as 30.6.1981 or 30.9.1981 but the doubt was
removed by reference to other entries in vicinity. The factum of
Gopal Prasad Tiwari, father of the accused, having begotten a son,
was entered at sl. No. 29. The preceding two entries refereable to
other children born to others, at Sl. Nos. 27 and 28 were dated
23.8.1981 and 15.9.1981 respectively and, therefore, the relevant
entry at Sl. No. 29 could be of 30.9.1981 only and not of 30.6.1981.
Thus, in substance, the High Court has concluded that the doubts
assumed to be in existence by the learned Sessions Judge were not
reasonable doubts and in the light of the explanation furnished by the
accused, there was hardly any room for doubt and a high degree of
probability was raised that the date of birth of the accused was
30.9.1981. In our opinion, the High Court has not erred in arriving at
the conclusion which it has reached and it rightly interfered with the
orders of the two courts below because if allowed to stand they would
have occasioned failure of justice.
It is true that the age of the accused is just on the border of
sixteen years and on the date of the offence and his arrest he was less
than 16 years by a few months only. In Arnit Das Vs. State of Bihar,
(2000) 5 SCC 488, this court has, on a review of judicial opinion, held
that while dealing with question of determination of the age of the
accused for the purpose of finding out whether he is a juvenile or not,
a hyper-technical approach should not be adopted while appreciating
the evidence adduced on behalf of the accused in support of the plea
that he was a juvenile and if two views may be possible on the said
evidence, the court should lean in favour of holding the accused to be
a juvenile in borderline cases. The law, so laid down by this court,
squarely applies to the facts of the present case.
For the foregoing reasons, the appeal is held devoid of any
merit. It is dismissed. The order of the High Court is maintained.
J.
( R.C. LAHOTI )
J.
(BRIJESH KUMAR)
January 24, 2002