Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SHIVAJI SAHEBRAO BOBADE & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MAHARASHTRA
DATE OF JUDGMENT27/08/1973
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
KHANNA, HANS RAJ
CITATION:
1973 AIR 2622 1974 SCR (1) 489
1973 SCC (2) 793
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1973 SC2773 (22,26)
APL 1974 SC 606 (8)
RF 1975 SC 241 (13)
D 1977 SC 472 (27)
RF 1981 SC1917 (16)
F 1983 SC 867 (28)
R 1984 SC1622 (152)
R 1988 SC2154 (9)
RF 1991 SC1842 (6)
ACT:
Code of Criminal Procedure (Act 5 of 1898)-Section 417-
Appeal against acquittal-Power of the High Court to
interfere-Norms for the exercise of the power.
HEADNOTE:
The dangers of exaggerated devotion to the rule of benefit
of doubt at the expense of social defence and to the
soothing sentiment that all acquittals are always good
regardless of justice to the victim and the community,
demand special emphasis in the contemporary context of
escalating crime and escape. The judicial instrument has a
public accountability. The cherished principles or golden
thread of proof beyond reasonable doubt which runs through
the web of our law should not be stretched morbidly to
embrace every hunch, hesitancy and degree of doubt. The
excessive solicitude reflected in the attitude that a
thousand guilty men may go but one innocent martyr shall not
suffer is a false dilemma. Only reasonable doubts belong to
the accused. Otherwise any practical system of justice will
breakdown and lose credibility with the community. if
unmerited acquittals become general, they tend to lead to a
cynical disregard of the law, and this in turn leads to a
public demand for harsher legal presumptions against
indicated ’persons’ and more severe punishment of those who
are found guilty. Jurisprudential enthusiasm for presumed
innocence must be moderated by the pragmatic need to make
criminal justice potent and realistic. A balance has to be
struck between chasing chance possibilities as good enough
to set the delinquent free and chopping the logic of pre-
ponderant probability to punish marginal innocents.
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Certainly, in the last analysis, reasonable doubts must
operate to the advantage of the appellant. In India the law
has been laid on these lines long ago.
The appellants were charged under s. 302 read with section
34 of the Indian Penal Code. The Sessions Court gave the
accused the benefit of doubt and acquitted them. On appeal
the High Court after elaborate consideration of the evidence
and the grounds relied upon by the trial judge to discard
the prosecution case, reversed the findings and convicted
both the accused to imprisonment for life. Confirming the
conviction and sentence and dismissing the appeal,
HELD : This Court had ever since its inception considered
the, correct principle to be applied by the court in an
appeal against an order of acquittal and held that the High
Court has full power to review at large the evidence upon
which the order of acquittal was founded and to reach the
conclusion that upon that evidence the order of acquittal
should be reversed. In law there are no fetters on the
plenary power of the_ appellate court to review the whole
evidence on which the order of acquittal is founded and,
indeed, it has a duty’ to scrutinise the probative material
de novo informed, however, by the weighty thought that the
rebuttable innocence attributed to the accused having been
converted into an acquittal the homage our jurisprudence
owes to individual liberty constrains the higher court not
to upset the holding without very convincing reasons and
comprehensive consideration. The High Court’s judgment
survives this exacting standard. [493F]
Sheo Swarup v. King-Emperor, [1934] L.R. 61 I.A. 398, Sanwat
Singh v. State of Rajasthan. [1961] 3 S.C.R. 120 and Hai-
bans Singh v. State of Punjab, [1962] Supp. 1 S.C.R. 104,
referred to.
[equere : Whether the punitive strategy of the Penal Code
sufficiently reflects the modern-trends in correctional
treatment and personalised sentencing.]
490
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeal No. 26
of 1970.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
February 4, 15 February, 1969 of the High Court of Bombay in
Criminal Appeal No. 800 of 1967.
V. C. Parashar, for the appellants.
S. B. Wad and S. P. Nayar, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KRISHNA IYER, J. The murder of an old man in broad day light
occurred on 26th September, 1966, on a country road in
Satara District and about seven years later the fluctuating
fortunes of the two young persons charged with the crime are
being finally set at rest. One of the misfortunes of our
criminal process, which stultifies penal justice, is the
counter-productive course of trial and appeal and appeal,
"at each remove a lengthening chain". The facts of the case
have been set out fairly fully in the judgments of the High
Court and the Trial Court and for the purposes of this
appeal it is sufficient to set out the story in its broad
essentials.
The venue of the offence lies on a cart track connecting the
villages of Bibi and Ghadgewadi. The dramatis personae are
P.W, 8. Sita Ram, a somewhat consequential man of village
Kadamwadi, his quondum servant, the deceased Hariba, the
alleged assailants (accused) Shivaji and Lalasaheb, the eye-
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witness Vilas (P. W. 5) who is the Assistant Gram Sewak of
the area, and others cast in lesser roles. There were some
disputes between the 2nd accused and P.W. 8. Kadamwadi, the
place of residence of these two persons, is a little to the
north of Ghadgewadi. About a mile to the south of
Ghadgewadi is Bibi which is 4 furlongs further south of
Kadamwadi. This topography is not very relevant except to
follow the arguments accepted by the trial judge. The
quarrel between P.W. 8 and the second accused had been
fostering since 1959 leading to reports to the police about
threatened violence and a criminal case which ended in the
acquittal of latter. There was no love lost between P.W. 8
and the first accused either. For P. W. 1 0 (Bhagwan), one
of the sons of the former, and his father-in-law who is a
close relation of the first accused, were not on terms for
reasons divergently given by the accused and Sita Ram
blaming each other. Thus it is more or less the admitted
case, and both the courts have found it established, that
the accused and P.W. 8 were mutually at loggerheads during
the relevant time. The deceased was in the service of P. W.
8 for a long while and although about 10 or 12 years ago he
had left the service, his loyalty lasted all the time with
the result that whenever Sita Ram requisitioned him he
readily responded. In a sense it is common case thai Hariba
was a satellite of P. W. 8 and was, at about the time of the
occurrence, an inmate of the house: P. W. 5 too was staving
in P.W.8’s house and must have been close to him as is
evident from the residential nexus. On the ill-starred day,
Hariba and Vilas set out to go to the weekly bazar at Bibi
after taking their food at about 10 or 10-30 a.m. They went
to P.W. 5’s office at Ghadgewadi and proceeded to Bibi where
Hariba did some shopping visiting P. W. 6 a shopkeeper and
Shiva Ram, a carpenter. Later both of them started
491
on their way back finishing their chores. The way lay along
a cart track from Bibi to Ghadgewadi. One Dada also had
accompanied them. of course, it was a day of fair and
people from the neighbouring villages going to and fro was
not unnatural. While the three men were trekking back and
were at some distance from Ghadgewadi the two accused turned
up from behind and called out to Dada to stop. He obeyed
and the other two went along. Thereupon the accused are
alleged to have run and overtaken the deceased and P.W. 5 at
the place known as Zamanacha Mala, Survey No. 8, Hariba, who
was asked to stop, Was set upon by the two assailants.
Accused No. 8 drew his knife and silenced P. W. 5 by threat
of stabbing if he broke into raising alarm. Soon after, the
second accused dealt knife blows on the deceased on the head
and eye-brow and accused No. 1 gave heavy strokes with a
wire rope to which was attached a leaden ball described as a
hunter by the witnesses. Hariba fell on the ground and the
second accused kicked him as he lay. Dada was warned not to
divulge and P.W. 5, similarly cautioned, was conducted by
the assailants up to a distance. It is significant that at
the time of the attack the accused angrily asked the
deceased whether he would still remain in the vasti (at
Kadamwadi with Sita Ram). According to the prosecution,
P.W. 7 Zumber was going by the same cart track from
Ghadgewadi to his field for sowing and when he reached the
spot was told by the accused to divert the cart and not to
speak out.
Dada left the place on being threatened and Vilas
accompanied the accused, having been intimidated against
going to Kadamwadi. A little later, one Balakrishna (P.W.
2) accompanied by Ramu Sakharam (P.W. 9) and others while on
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his way from Ghadgewadi side to Bibi stumbled on the scene
where Hariba was sinking. One Anna, father of Zumber (P.W.
7) was, at about the same time, coming from Bibi side.
’Ibis person asked helpless Hariba what befell him and was
told by the latter that Lala and Shivaya (the names are of
the accused) had beaten him. Shortly after, he breathed his
last. P.Ws. 2 and 9 were present then. P.W. 2 proceeded to
Bibi and reported the death of Hariba to P.W. 15, Narayan,
the police patil at Bibi, Ext. 8. The report was recorded
and was transmitted to the police, the First Information
Report being Ext. 36.
Several witnesses were examined and documents exhibited at
the end of which the Sessions Court concluded : "In any case
a reasonable doubt is cast to the case of the prosecution
and the benefit thereof must be given to the accused. I,,
therefore, hold that it is not proved that the accused
committed the offence". In his judgment, which adverts with
apparent care to all the relevant circumstances but suffers
from a few fatal flaws which we will refer to in due course,
the trial judge negatived the veracity of the prosecution
version, but on appeal by the State a Division Bench of the
Bombay High Court, after elaborate consideration of the
evidence and the grounds relied upon by the trial judge to
discard the prosecution’s case, reversed the findings. The
conviction that followed was visited with a sentence of
imprisonment for life. The court wound up thus :
"Having thus given our anxious consideration
to the entire material on record and the
evidence of the eye-witnesses,
492
Vilas and Zumber, we are satisfied that the
learned Judge was not right in rejecting the
prosecution evidence and acquitting the
accused. We, therefore, hold that on the
evidence of the two eyewitnesses coupled with
the several circumstances pointed out above
the prosecution has brought home the guilt to
the two accused beyond all reasonable doubt,
and the only finding in this case can be that
the prosecution has proved that the two
accused had assaulted and attacked the
deceased with knife and the hunter with the
lead-ball and caused injuries to him which
resulted in his death. Both the accused must,
therefore, be held guilty of the offence under
section 302 read with section 34 of the Indian
Penal Code."
The two prisoners have challenged the reversal of their
acquittal in this Court.
Before dealing with the merits of the contentions, we may
perhaps make a few preliminary remarks provoked by the
situation presented by this case. An appellant aggrieved by
the overturning of his acquittal deserves the final court’s
deeper concern on fundamental principles of criminal
justice. The present accused, who have suffered such a
fate, have hopefully appealed to us for a loaded approach
against guilt in consonance with the initial innocence
presumed in their favour fortified by the acquittal that
followed. We are clearly in agreement with this noble
proposition, stated in American Jurisprudence at, one time
(not now, though) as implied in the rule against double
jeopardy, in the British system as a branch of the benefit
of reasonable doubt doctrine and in our own on the more
logical, socially relevant and modern basis, that an
acquitted accused should not be put in peril of conviction
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on appeal save where substantial and compelling grounds
exist for such a course. In India it is not a
jurisdictional limitation on the appellate court but a
judge-made guideline of circumspection. But we hasten to
add even here that, although the learned judges of the High
Court have not expressly stated so, they have been at pains
to dwell at length on all the pointed relied on by the trial
court as favourable to the prisoners for the good reason
that they wanted to be satisfied in their conscience whether
there was credible testimony warranting, on a fair
consideration, a reversal of the acquittal registered by the
court below. In law there are no fetters on the plenary
power of the Appellate Court to review the whole evidence on
which the order of acquittal is founded and, indeed, it has
a duty to scrutinise the probative material de novo, in-
formed, however, by the weighty thought that the rebuttable
innocence, attributed to the accused having been converted
into an acquittal the homage our jurisprudence owes to
individual liberty constrains the higher court not to upset
the holding without very convincing reasons and com-
prehensive consideration, In our view the High Court’s
judgment survives this exacting standard.
Even at this stage we may remind ourselves of a necessary
social perspective in criminal cases which suffers from
insufficient forensic appreciation. The dangers of
exaggerated devotion to the rule of benefit of doubt at the
expense of social defence and to the soothing sentiment that
all acquittals are. always good regardless of justice to the
493
victim and .,the community,’ demand especial emphasis in the
contemporary context of escalating crime and escape. The
judicial instrument has a public accountability. The
cherished principles or golden thread of proof beyond
reasonable doubt which runs thro’ the web of our law should
not be stretched morbidly to embrace every hunch, hesitancy
and degree of doubt. The excessive solicitude reflected in
the attitude that a thousand guilty men may go but one
innocent martyr shall not suffer is a false dilemma. Only
reasonable doubts belong to the accused. Otherwise any
practical system of justice will then break down and lose
credibility with the community. The evil of acquitting a
guilty person lightheartedly as a learned author(1) has
sapiently observed, goes much beyond the simple fact that
just one guilty person has gone unpunished. If unmerited
acquittals become general, they tend to lead to a cynical
disregard of the law, and this in turn leads to a public
demand for harsher legal presumptions against indicated
’persons’ and more severe punishment of those who are found
guilty. Thus too frequent acquittals of the guilty may lead
to a ferocious penal law, eventually eroding the judicial
protection of the guiltless. For all these reasons it is
true to say’, with Viscount Simon, that "a miscarriage of
justice may arise from the acquittal of the ,guilty no less
than from the conviction of the innocent. .."-In short, our
jurisprudential enthusiasm for presumed innocence must be
moderated by the pragmatic need to make criminal justice
potent and realistic. A balance has to be struck between
chasing enhance possibilities as good enough to set the
delinquent free arid chopping the logic of preponderant
probability to, punish marginal innocents. We have adopted
these cautious in analysing the evidence and appraising the
soundness of the contrary conclusions reached by the courts
below. Certainly, in the last analysis reasonable doubts
must operate to the advantage of the appellant. In India
the law has been laid down on these lines long ago.
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This Court had ever since its inception considered the
correct principle to be applied by the Court in an appeal
against an order of acquittal and held that the High Court
has full power to review at large I the evidence upon which
the order of acquittal was founded and to reach the
conclusion that upon that evidence the order of acquittal
should be reversed. The, Privy, Council in Sheo Swarup v.
King Emperor(2) negatived the legal basis for the limitation
which the several decisions of the High Courts had placed on
the right of the State to appeal under s. 417 of the Code.
Lord Russel delivering the judgment of the Board pointed out
that there was "no indication in the Code of any limitation
or restriction on the High Court in the exercise of its
powers as an appellate tribunal", that no distinction was
drawn "between an appeal from an order of acquittal and an
appeal from a conviction", and that "no limitation should be
placed upon that power unless it be found expressly stated
in the Code". He further pointed out at p. 404 that, "the
High Court should and will always give proper weight and
consideration to such matters as (1) the views of the trial
judge as to the credibility of the witnesses, (2) the
presumption of innocence in favour of the accused, a
presumption certainly not weakened by the fact that he has
(1) Clanville Williams in ’Proof of Guilt’. (2) [1934] L.
R. 61 I. A. 398.
494
been, acquitted at his trial, (3) the right of the accused
lo the benefit of any doubt, and (4) the slowness of an
appellate Court in disturbing a finding of fact arrived at
by a Judge who had the advantage of seeing the witnesses".
In Sanwat Singh & Others v. State of Rajasthan. (1) after an
exhaustive review of cases decided by the Privy Council as
well as by this Court, this Court considered the principles
laid down in Sheo Swarup’s case(2) and held that they
afforded a correct guide for the appellate court’s approach
to a case against an order of acquittal. It was again
pointed out by Das Gupta, J. delivering the judgment of five
Judges in Harbans Singh and Another v. State of Pubjab(3)
"In many cases, especially the earlier ones
the Court has in laying down such principles
emphasised the necessity of interference with
an order of acquittal being based only on "
compelling and substantial reasons’ and has
expressed the view that unless such reasons
are present an Appeal Court should not
interfere with an order of acquittal (vide
Suraj Pal Singh v. The State-(1952) S.C.R.
194; Ajmer Singh v. State of Punjab (1953)
S.C.R.418; Puran v. State of Punjab A.I.R.
1953 S.C. 458). The use of the, words
’compelling reasons’ embarrassed some of the
High Courts in exercising their jurisdiction
in appeals against acquittals and difficulties
occasionally arose as to what this Court had
meant by the words ’compelling reasons’. In
later years the Court has often avoided
emphasis on ’compelling reasons’ but
nonetheless adhered to the’ view
expressed
earlier that before interfering in appeal with
an order of acquittal a Court must
examine .not only questions of law and fact in
all their aspects but must also closely and
carefully examine the reasons which impelled
the lower courts to acquit the accused "and
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should interfere only if satisfied after such
examination that the conclusion reached by the
lower court that the guilt of the person has
not been proved is unreasonable. (Vide Chinta
v. The State of Madhya Pradesh-Criminal Appeal
No. 178 of 1959 decided on 18-11-1960;
Asharakha Haibatkha Pathan v. The State of
Bombay-Criminal Appeal No. 38 of 1960 decided
on 14-12-1960).
"...... On close analysis, it is clear that
the principles laid down by the Court in this
matter have remained the same. What may be
called the golden thread running through all
these decisions is the rule that in deciding
appeals against acquittal the Court of Appeal
must examine the evidence with particular
care, must examine also the reason on which
the order of acquittal was based and should
interfere with, the order only when satisfied
that the view taken by the acquitting Judge is
clearly unreasonable. Once the appellate
court comes to the conclusion that the view
taken by the lower court is clearly an
unreasonable one that itself is a "compelling
(1) [1961] 3 S.C. R. 120. (2)
[1934] L. R. 61 1. A. 398..
(3)[1962] Suppl. (1) S. C. R. 104 at p. 109.
495
reason" for interference. For, it is a
court’s duty to convict a guilty person when
the guilt is established beyond reasonable
doubt, no less than it is its duty to acquit
the accused when such guilt is not so
established."
Now to the facts. The scene of murder is rural, the
witnesses to the case are rustics and so their behavioural
pattern and perceptive habits have to be judged as such.
The too sophisticated approaches familiar in courts based on
unreal assumptions about human conduct cannot obviously be
applied to those given to the lethargic ways of our
villages. When scanning the evidence of the various
witnesses we have to inform ourselves that variances on the
fringes, discrepancies in details, contradictions in
narrations and embellishments in inessential parts cannot
militate against the veracity of the core of the testimony
provided there is the impress of truth and conformity to
probability in the substantial fabric of testimony
delivered. The learned Sessions Judge as at some length.
dissected the evidence, spun out contradictions and
unnatural conduct, and tested with precision the time and
sequence of the events connected with the crime, all on the
touchstone of the medical evidence and the postmortem
certificate. Certainly, the court which has seen the
witnesses depose, has a great advantage over the appellate
judge who reads the recorded evidence in cold print, and
regard must be had to this advantage enjoyed by the trial
judge of observing the demeanour and delivery, of reading
the straightforwardness and doubtful candour, rustic naivete
and clever equivocation, manipulated conformity and
ingenious unveracity, of persons who swear to the facts
before him. Nevertheless, where a judge draws his
conclusions not so much on the directness or dubiety of the
witness while on oath but upon general probabilities and on
expert evidence, the court of appeal is in as good a
position to assess or arrive at legitimate conclusions as
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the court of first instance. Nor can we make a fetish of
the trial judge’s psychic insight.
Let us now sift the evidence from the proper perspective
outlined above avoiding both the exploitation of every
plausible suspicion as militating against the certitude of
guilt and the unjust loading of the dice against the accused
merely because of a conviction rendered by the High Court.
The probative items placed before the court by the
prosecution there is no defence evidence adduced-falls into
three groups. Firstly, we have the eye-witness account of
the mortal attack as given by P. Ws. 5 and 7. Secondly, the
dying declaration stated to have been made by the deceased a
little before he expired and witnesses, Balakrishna and
Ramu, P.Ws. 2 and 9, have been cited in support thereof.
The last set of incriminating facts consists in the
discovery, under section 27 of Evidence Act, of certain
material objects pursuant to the statements made by the
accused supported by the evidence of few persons and the
chemical analyst’s report. The Sessions Judge has rejected
all the, three categories taking up an extreme position
grounded on the medical evidence and supposed human conduct
while the appellate judges have swung to the opposite
standpoint and accepted substantially all the prosecution
evidence. With vigilant skepticism, let us scan the
important evidence without going over the whole ground
again.
496
That Liariba died of violence on 26th September, 1966, is
indubitable, but who did him to death is a moot point. The
lethal attack is alleged to have been made on a cart-.track
lying between the two villages, Bibi and Ghadgewali in the
afternoon on a bazaar day in the former village when people
must evidently have been moving about. The macabre story of
an old man, Hariba, being killed on a road near village Bibi
around 5-30 p.m. by two known persons, Shivaji and Lalasaheb
was recounted by one Balakrishna (P.W. 2) before the Police
Patial (P. W. 15) in less than an hour of the incident (vide
Ex. 8 and Ex. 36). Thus, the first information has been
laid promptly, if we assume the hour of death to have been
correctly stated there. Ext. 8 does mention briefly the
material facts and the crucial witnesses in what may be
treated as a hurriedly drawn up embryonic document. The
contention of counsel for the respondents before us, which
has received judicial reinforcement by acceptance by the
Sessions Judge, is that this first information is an ersatz
product of many minds manupulating to make it, and the
apparently short, honest interval between the occurrence and
the report, to the Patil is a make-believe, the death having
occurred beyond doubt at about 2-00 p.m. and not at 5-30
p.m. as the prosecution disingenously pleads. Reliance is
primarily placed for this pre-clocking of the occurrence on
the postmortem certificate, doctor’s evidence and the
medical expertise contained in Modi’s Medical Jurisprudence.
Admittedly, ’semi-digested solid food particles’ were
observed in the deceased’s stomach by P.W. 4 the medical
officer, and the inference sought to be too neatly drawn
therefrom is that the man must have come by his end (and
that the digestive process must also have come to a halt
with it) 2 to 3 hours after his last lunch, which, according
to P.W. 2, was at 10.00 a.m. If he did die before 2.00 p.m.,
everything else in the prosecution evidence became suspect,
argued the court. The assurance of this assertion, however,
turns on the exact accuracy, in terms of the I.S.T., of the
testimony of P.W. 5 who swore that himself and the deceased
had taken food on the fateful day at about 10.00 or 10.30
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a.m. before setting out for Bibi. The sluggish chronometric
sense of the country-side community in India is notorious
since time is hardly of the essence of their slow life; and
even urban folk make mistakes about ’time when no particular
reason to observe and remember the hour of minor event like
taking a morning meal existed. 10.30 a.m. could well have
been an hour or more one way or the other and too much play
on such slippery facts goes against realism so essential in
a testimonial appraisal. More importantly, the court must
not abandon a scientific attitude to medical science if it
is not to be guilty or judicial superstition To quote Modi’s
Medical Jurisprudence that food would be completely digested
in four to five hours or to swear by the doctor to deduce
that death must have occurred within 3 hours of the eating
and, therefrom, to argue that the presence of undigested
food in the dead body spells the sure inference that death
must have occurred before 2.00 p.m. is to mis-read the
science on the subject of digestive processes. Modi’s
Medical Jurisprudence, extracts from which have been given
by both the courts, makes out that a mixed diet of animal
and vegetable foods. normally taken by Europeans, takes 4 to
5 hours for complete digestion while a vegetable diet,
containing mostly farinaceous food usually consumed by
Indians, does not leave the stomach completely within 6 to 7
hours after its ingestion. Indeed, the learned author
cautiously adds
497
that the stomachic contents cannot determine with precision
the time of death "inasmuch as the power of digestibility
may remain in abeyance for a long time in states of profound
shock and coma". He also states "it must also be remembered
that the process of digestion in normal healthy persons may
continue for a time after death". The learned judges
reminded themselves of the imponderables pointed out by Modi
which makes the ’digestive’ testimony inconclusive and,
therefore, insufficient to contradict positive evidence, if
any, about the time of death To impute exactitude to a
medical statement oblivious to the variables noticed by
experts and changes in dietary habits is to be unfair to the
science. We are not prepared to run the judicial risk of
staking the whole verdict on nebulous medical observations.
Given so according to P.W. 5 deceased took tea some time
after 12-30 p.m. when they started for Bibi. At that time
the possibility of his having had something to eat is not
ruled out. If so, the medical evidence as to the time of
death will not be inconsistent with the postmortem findings.
Now let us get into the core of the matter to ascertain
whether reasonable doubts about the prosecution case are
available on the record. Have we credible eye-witness
evidence ? Have we corroborating circumstances ? Have any
key witnesses been kept out of the Court without just
explanation or rousing serious suspicion ? Are there
circumstances militating against the reliability of the
State’s case ? Have the accused a plausible explanation for
incriminating discoveries ? As stated earlier, there are
three types of evidence adduced on behalf of the
prosecution. Eye-witnesses must naturally figure most
prominently in a judicial search for truth. P.W. 5, Vilas,
had admittedly some quarrel with the second accused and
friendliness with Sita Ram (P. W. 8) who in turn bore bitter
hostility towards both the accused. In that view, P.W. 5
may be said to be tainted by bias and interestedness and so
his testimony must be warily evaluated. However, witnesses
who are not neutral may well testify to truth and need not
be condemned out of hand provided in basic features their
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deposition is direct, probable and otherwise corroborated.
Absent such reassuring factors P.W. 5’s evidence may have to
be eschewed. Vilas speaks to his having taken his forenoon
meal on the 26th September 1966 at Kadam wadi. He bad met
Hariba, quite naturally, because both of them were staying
in the house of Sita Ram. They set out together to Bibi as
each had some work in that place. The journey together is
explained in the evidence in a credible manner. They appear
to have met grocer Himmat Gujar (P.W. 6) and each one
purchased some sundry items from his shop. This fact is
corroborated by P.W. 6. While returning they stepped into
the house of one Shiva Ram and later proceeded to Kaclamwadi
at about 3-45 or 4. p.m. One Dada who was also going in the
same direction, joined them. All this is consistent with
country. side leisureliness and gregariousness. As they
were walking along, the accused called out to Dada who
waited in response while the deceased and Vilas went ahead.
Whereupon the accused spring upon. Hariba. At the behest
of accused No. 1, accused No. 2 drew his knife, frightened
Vilas into silence and gave knife blows on the head and eye-
brow or Hariba. The first accused made his violent
contribution with a ’hunter’ to which a lead-ball was
attached and the strikers therewith brought the deceased
down on the ground. The second accused kicked the fallen
498
man, P.W.5, speaks to these facts as also to the accused
accosting the deceased whether he would still reside in the
Vasti. The arrival at about that time of Zumber Mali, P.W.
7 in a cart, from Ghadgewadi side is also spoken to by P.W.
5. He would have us believe that he was taken by the
accused, threatened to keep what he saw secret and warned
not to leave Ghadgewadi for a couple of days. The witness
later went to his office at Ghadgewadi and mentioned about
Haris violent death to school boy Bhanudas (P.W. 17), the
son of Sita Ram. Many other inconsequential details were
also related by the witness but the fact remains that he met
Sita-Ram (P.W. 8) only at about 9 p.m. and had not informed
the authorities before that. The failure to disclose the
incident to any one at the village Ghadgewadi, the bias and
interest Vilas had, the evidence that Hariba had taken the
food at about 10 or 10-30 a.m. and that later on they had
not taken meals any where-a circumstance which militates
against the medical evidence about undigested food in the
cadavar, in a feeble way though-the slight discrepancy
between Vilas, P.W. 5, and Sita Ram, P.W. 8 about the time
of the former’s arrival at Kadamwadi and the unnaturalness
of the twists and turns of the story narrated by Mm-these
are made points of veliement criticism by the accused.
There is elaborate discussion of his evidence by both the
courts. "There is nothing unnatural or improbable", is the
view of the High Court about P.W. 5’s evidence. Himmat Lal,
P.W. 6 substantially corroborates the visit of the deceased
and P.W. 5 to his shop at Bibi early in the afternoon.
Likewise Shiva Ram, P.W. 12 swears to the deceased and P.W.
5 being together at Bibi till about 3-30 p.m. This also
strengthens the version of Vilas. The minor conflict
between P.W. 8 who says that P.W. 5 came at lamp-lighting
time while P.W. 5 puts it at 9 p.m. is of little moment.
The other criticisms also do not add up to much-although.
certainly this somewhat interested witness must be subjected
to serious corroboration in material particulars before he
can be acted upon.
The evidence of Zumber (P.W. 7) is relied upon as that of an
eyewitness because he swears to having seen the accused
kicking and fisting the deceased. However, his testimony
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looks tricky and shaky. He had stated in the committal
court that he had not seen whether the first accused had a
hunter with him and the second accused a knife in his hand.
It is also doubtful that a witness who had been declared
hostile in the committal court by the prosecution can be so
readily accepted at his word. If he had been won over by
one party at one stage, as the prosecution seems to suggest,
it is difficult to accept his integrity in a grave case of
murder when he deposes as an eye-witness. What is more his
flagrant contradiction on a crucial point between the
committal court and the Sessions Court weakens his veracity,
and worse is his conduct when he says that he was able to
see the occurrence from an uneven terrain because he went to
sow in the field that afternoon although his uncle had died
that very day and he had gone for the funeral The witness
admits that he did not ask the accused why they were kicking
the man nor did he stop the sowing in the field at least to
see what had happened to the victim. Even on his way back
when he saw people collected near the dead body, he did not
bother to enquire what had happened. To taint his
truthfulness he admits that there was a quarrel between the
accused’s uncle on the one hand and himself and his father
on the other. A careful reading of the evidence given by
this
499
the place at all that afternoon. We are not able to agree
with the easy credence lent by the learned Judges of the
High Court to this testimony. In short, there is only a
single eye-witness to the occurrence, P.W. 5.
A legitimate criticism is made as to why Dada has been with-
drawn. It is not as if every witness who has something to
do with some part of the prosecution story should pass
through the witness box. There is a discretion in the
Public Prosecutor to pick and choose but to be fair to the
Court and to truth. If Dada were essential to untold the
prosecution story and had been suspiciously suppressed from
the Court, we would and should have drawn an adverse infe-
rence but in the circumstances set out earlier, Dada does
not seem to be an eye-witness to the actual attack and his
absence from the witnessbox is not, therefore, fatal to the
prosecution. No sinister motive can be imputed to his not
being examined. Prudence would have suggested a different
course.
Had the whole case rested on the sole testimony of P.W. 5
our minds would have wavered. The prosecution places, by
way of corroboration, the dying declaration of Hariba.
Balakrishna, P.W. 2. a resident of Bibi who is the first
informant in the case, states that he had proceeded from
Bibi to Ghadgewadi for purchasin’g’ his rations, having
received wages in the morning. Ramu (P.W. 9) and a few
others were also with him. On their way back from
Ghadgewadi to Bibi after buying rations, they came by three
persons identified as accused No. 1 and accused No. 2 and
the Secretary (presumably P.W. 5). Balakrishna (P.W. 2)
testifies to having seen the deceased lying on the road at
Jamana field. One Anna Mali and a "malaria doctor" had come
from the basti side at the spot at about that time. A man
lying on the road was bleeding and Anna asked him why he
came by the wounds whereupon Hariba spoke in a groaning tone
to the he of P.W. 2 and others that Lala and Shiva had
beaten him. This =Is says that the malaria doctor had left
without stopping there-not that unnatural in our country to
see people disappear when anything savouring of violent
crime takes place fearing that their remaining there might
involve them as witness or otherwise later on. Any way,
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P.W. 2 proceeded to Bibi, reported to the Police Patil, P.W.
15 and signed the statement recorded from. him, Ext. 8.
Little injury has been inflicted on his testimony in cross-
examination and no serious reason has been made out in this
Court why the High Court’s acceptance of his word should be
rejected. Indeed, apart from describing the evidence as
unnatural and as not in consonance with Zumber’s presence,
precious little has been adduced by the trial court to
discredit his evidence. But the criticism about the non-
examination of Anna who drew the dying declaration from the
mouth of the deceased and of the malaria doctor, who
Drobably is a respectable man by rural standards, cannot be
lightly brushed aside. The non-examination of the latter
need not detain us because smelling trouble he had made
himself scarce without even stopping there. The failure to
put
500
Anna in the witness box after having cited him disturb our
minds a little more but he is the father of Zumber and may
at the most repeat what P.W. 2 has sworn. The prosecutor
giving him up under these circumstances, may perhaps be
taking chances with the court but we are not persuaded of
any unfairness in the special circumstances of this case.
It is noteworthy that P. W. 2 had purchased rations as
deposed to by P.W. 14, their ration shopkeeper. P.W. 9 Ramu
who had accompanied P.W. 2 also corroborates him Ext. 8, the
first information statement, makes specific reference to the
dying declaration made to Anna. We are satisfied that P.W.
2 and P.W. 9 are credible enough to prove the dying
declaration since P.W. 9 also has not suffered any material
dent in his evidence as a result of cross-examination. We
are conscious that undocumented dying declarations’ are easy
to get up and being based on the fading recollection and
unsure probity of ordinary persons with human frailities,
cannot be safely trusted save when the general features and
other dependable materials justify reliance. Even so the
natural statement of Hariba about the cause of his death to
the passersby proved by P.Ws. 2 and 9, read in the
background of other circumstances of the case, overcomes the
rule of prudent reluctance judicially adopted in evaluating
oral dying declarations.
The discovery of incriminating materials pursuant to
confessions made by the accused constitutes the third
category of, evidence. Obviously, the confessions are
inadmissible but- the discoveries are, provided they are
pertinent to the guilt of the accused., So far as accused
No. 2 is concerned, his statement resulted in the discovery
of a knife (vide Panchnama, Ext. 13). of course, knives
were discovered long ago and not now but this knife lay
buried and was recovered by the .accused from a pit in the
corner of a wall of his house. There was .human blood on
the blade of the knife, M.O. 5/11 according to the chemical
analyst’s report. The second accused’s clothes also were
picked up by him pursuant to his statement. He had worn a
shirt and pants on the day of occurrence and P.W. 13, a
neighbour deposes that ,the second accused had come to him
at about 6 p.m. on the Monday when Hari died and had
mentioned to him that since his own house was locked he
might be permitted to keep his clothes in the witness’s
house. Thereafter he left his clothes under am empty Khokha
from where he himself took them out-when he later came in.
the company of .the police. There are blood ’Stains on the
clothes and it is found by, the chemical examiner that the
blood on the pants are of the same blood group as that of
the deceased. When the second accused was asked under sec.
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342, Cr. P.C. about the export of the chemical examiner
noticing blood stains on the shirt, M.O. 5/2 and of human
blood on the blade of the knife, M.O. 511, he merely
answered, "I do not know". He also described as false the
fact of his recovering the clothes and the knife. Bald
denial notwithstanding, we are inclined to believe, with the
learned Judges of the High Court. that the knife and the
shirt have been identified as his and since he gad recovered
them, thereby making the police discover, the fact, there
was incriminating inference available against the said
accused. We may notice here a serious omission committed by
the trial Judge and not noticed by either
501
court. The pants allegedly worn at the time of the attack
by the second accused has stains of blood relatable to the.
group of the deceased. This circumstance binds him to, the
crime a little closer but it is unfortunate that no specific
question about this circumstance has been put to him by the
court. It is trite law, nevertheless fundamental that the
prisoner’s attention should be drawn to every inculpatory
material so as to enable him to explain it. This is the
basic fairness of a criminal trial and failures in this area
many gravely’ imperil the validity of the trial itself, if
consequential miscarriage of justice has flowed. However,
where such an omission has occurred it does not ipso facto
vitiate the proceedings and- prejudice occasioned by such
defect must be established by the accused. In the event of
evidentiary material not being put to the accused, the court
must ordinarily eschew such material from consideration. it
is also open to the appellate court to call has as regards
the circumstances established against him but not put to him
and if the accused is unable to offer the appellate court
any plausible or reasonable explanation of Such
circumstances, the court may assume that no acceptable
answer exists and that even if the accused had been
questioned at the proper time in the trial court he would
not have been able to furnish any good ground to get out of
the circumstances on which the trial court had relied for
its conviction. In such a case, the court proceeds on the
footing that though a grave irregularity has occurred as
regards compliance with section 342, Cr. P.C., the
omission has not been shown to hive caused prejudice to the
accused. In, the present case, however, the High Court,
though not the trial court has relied upon the presence (if
blood on the, pants of the blood group of the deceased.
We have not been shown what explanation the accused could
have offered to this chemical finding particularly when we
remember that his answer to the question regarding the human
blood on, the blade of the knife was ’I do not know’.
Counsel for the appellants could not make out any
intelligent explanation and the ’blood’ testimony takes the
crime closer to the accused. However, we are not inclined
to rely over much on this evidentiary-circumstance. although
we should emphasise how this inadvertence of the trial court
had led to a relevant fact being argued as unavailable to
the the prosecution. Great-care is expected of Sessions
Judges.who try grave cases to collect every incriminating
circumstance and put it to the accused even though at the
end of a long trial the Judge may be a little fagged out.
The first accused also had made a statement leading to the
discovery of a hunter with a lead-ball from a pit in the
field of his uncle Bobade (vide Panchnama Ext. 14). P.W. 3,
the Panch witness speaks to this effect. The High Court has
relied on this evidence with which we agree After all a
hunter with a lead-ball is not something ordinarily found in
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fields or wells or in houses. The conclusion that emerges
from these discoveries is that the apparel, of the second
accused and the weapons recovered establish some nexus
between the crime and the appellants. We are aware that by
themselves they are inconclusive but in conjunction with
other facts they may have efficacy.
502
Some attempt was made to show that the many injuries found
on the person of the deceased and the manner of their
infliction as deposed to by the eye-witnesses do not tally.
There is no doubt that substantially the wounds and the
weapons and the manner of causation run congruous.
Photographic picturisation of blows and Kicks and hits and
strikes in an attack cannot be expected from witnesses who
are not fabricated and little turns on indifferent
incompatibilities. Efforts to harmonise humdrum details
betray police tutoring, not rugged truth-, fulness.
Now let us sum up the whole case in the light of the
evidence we have found to be of worth. We must observe that
even if a witness is not reliable, he need not be false and
even if the Police have trumped up one witness or two or has
embroidered the story to give a credible look to their case
that cannot defeat justice if there is clear and un-
impeachable evidence making out-the guilt of the accused.
Certainly, it is a primary principle that the accused must
be and not merely may be guilty before a court can convict
and the mental distance between ,may be’ and ’must be’ is
long and divides vague conjectures from sure conclusions.
Informing ourselves of these important principles we analyse
the evidence found good by us. In our view there is only
one eye-witness, P.W. 5, Vilas. Even if the case against
the accused hangs on the evidence of a single eye-,witness
it may be enough to sustain the, conviction given sterling
testimony of a competent, honest man, although as a rule of
prudence courts call for corroboration. It is a platitude
to say that witnesses have to be weighed and not counted
since quality matters more than quantity in human affairs.
We are persuaded that the PW 5 is a witness for truth but in
view of the circumstances that he is interested, we would
still want corroboration in this case to reassure ourselves.
And that we have in this case.
The earlier discussion leaves unscathed the dying
declaration and incriminating discoveries and the only
question is whether they are sufficient to reinforce the
essential facts bearing on the appellants’ direct
involvement in the crime. The accused, we feel convinced,
are reasonably proved to have murdered Heriba. But counsel
argues that no animus against the victim has been made out
and motiveless malignity militates against natural human
condut. Proof of motive satisfies the judicial mind about
the likelihood of the authorship but its absence only
demands deeper forensic search and cannot undo the effect of
evidence otherwise sufficient. Motives of men are often
subjective, submerged and unamenable to easy proof that
courts have to go without clear evidence thereon if other
clinching evidence exists. In the case on hand the enmity
with Sita Ram being active and admitted,,
503
the pique against Hariba, his loyal dependent, is
understandable. While striking the deceased he was asked in
a tell-tale manner, whether he would still stay at Vasti
(Kadamwadi, with Sita Ram). That betrays the motive. We
affirm the finding of the High Court.
Two men in their twenties thus stand convicted of murder and
have to suffer imprisonment for life because the punitive
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strategy of our Penal Code does not sufficiently reflect the
modern trends in correctional treatment and personalised
sentencing. We do riot wish to consider these facets as
they fall outside our scope here.
We confirm the conviction and sentence and dismiss the
appeal.
K. B. N. Appeal
dismissed.
504