Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 242 of 2000
PETITIONER:
SHRI BHAGWAN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF RAJASTHAN
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 10/05/2001
BENCH:
M B Shah & K.G. Balakrishnan
JUDGMENT:
K.G. BALAKRISHNAN, J.
L...I...T.......T.......T.......T.......T.......T.......T..J
The facts in this criminal appeal disclose acts of
unparalleled evil and barbarity as five persons of a family
were battered to death without mercy by a young culprit aged
about 20 years.
PW-17 Shiv Pratap, his wife, three daughters and aged
parents were residing in a house at Bidasar. The marriage
of the eldest daughter of Shiv Pratap was fixed to be held
on 20.2.1994. In order to purchase some articles for the
marriage, Shiv Pratap and his wife Bhanwari had left for
Jaipur on 14th December, 1993. They came back to Bidasar
from Jaipur on 17th December, 1993 at about 9.30 PM. On
reaching the house, they found the outer door of the house
open and the inside room was found bolted from within.
PW-17 knocked at the door in vain and after sometime he
scaled over the wall and gained entry into the room. He
found his parents lying dead with multiple injuries. PW-17
and his wife then went to the room of their daughters. That
room was found locked from outside. PW-17 broke open the
lock and found dead bodies of his three daughters. Various
blood-stained articles were found strewn in the room. PW-17
used to peg the bag containing gold and silver jewellery of
the shop. That bag was also found missing. Shocked at the
incident, they made a hue and cry. The brother of PW-17 who
was staying nearby came to the house. Some neighbours also
came there in the meanwhile and saw the ghastly incident.
By about 9.45 P.M., PW-17 gave the P-8 statement before the
Station House Officer of Police Station Chhapar ( PW-23).
PW-23 registered a case and immediately visited the place of
occurrence. He recorded the statement of Bhanwari (PW-1);
Murlidhar (PW-2) and also the further statement of Shiv
Pratap (PW-17). On the next day, he took various
photographs and conducted inquest of the dead bodies of all
the five deceased persons. The various articles, including
clothes found lying in the house, were recovered. Many of
these articles were found blood-stained.
In his statement, PW-2, Murlidhar mentioned that on the
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evening of 14th December, 1993, he had seen the deceased
Jora Ram, the father of Shiv Pratap, at about 6.00 PM going
to his house after closing the shop and the appellant, Shri
Bhagwan was also accompanying him. PW-2 further stated that
Shri Bhagwan was known to him previously as he had worked in
the shop of Shiv Pratap for about 8 to 10 months. He also
stated that he saw the appellant and Jora Ram entering the
house of Shiv Pratap. Based on this information, appellant
Shri Bhagwan was arrested on the night of 18th December,
1993 and the investigation of the case was taken over by
PW-24 . He too visited the place of occurrence and
collected various articles from there. A broken iron
’Kunta’, a wooden Pestle and an iron scissors were also
recovered from the scene of occurrence and all these
articles were stained with blood. The appellant was
interrogated and based on his statement, an axe was
recovered from the water tank located on the terrace of the
house of Shiv Pratap. During the course of further
investigation, the appellant gave a statement regarding the
place of concealment of golden jewellery and other articles
taken away from the house of Shiv Pratap. Appellant’s
brother-in-law (Bahnoi) Ramu Ram was a resident of Sardar
Shahar. The appellant led the police party to the house of
Ramu Ram and from his house a bag containing jewellery and
other articles were seized under Ex. P-83. These articles
included one gold finger-ring, gold ear tops and nose tops,
white pearls, etc. All these articles were later identified
by Shiv Pratap as gold ornaments belonging to his mother and
daughters. From the house of Ramu Ram, a small tobacco box
was recovered which contained 12 copper pieces and an
envelope of ’Kumkum Patri’ addressed to Shiv Pratap,
Bidasar, and the sender’s name was one Manak Chand Soni
(PW-10). Manak Chand was examined and he deposed that this
invitation had been sent by him to Shiv Pratap on the
occasion of the marriage of his daughter which was on 10th
December, 1993.
Appellant, Shri Bhagwan also gave a statement to the
effect that while he was travelling in a bus, he had thrown
away the shirt worn by him at the time of occurrence, near a
place three kilometers away from Sujangarh. The appellant
led the police party to that place and the said shirt was
recovered from the bushes near the place where the appellant
had stated to have thrown the same. This shirt was
blood-stained and it bore the label of 786 J.K. Tailors,
Subzi Mandi, S.R.D.R. On the shirt, number 427 was found
marked. The investigation officer later visited the said
shop of J.K. Tailors and questioned the owner of the shop,
Zafar Hussain (PW-18). PW-18 stated that he had stitched
the shirt for the appellant and he had also recorded the
name of the appellant and the measurements in the register.
Exh. P-48 is the register maintained by him and as against
serial number 427, the name of appellant, Shri Bhagwan Soni
was found written.
The appellant was tried for offences under Section 302
and 392 read with Section 397 IPC and was found guilty. For
the offences under Section 392 and 397 IPC, he was sentenced
to undergo R.I. for seven years and to pay a fine of
Rs.200/-. For the offence under Section 302 IPC, the
appellant was sentenced to death and to pay a fine of
Rs.200/- by the Sessions Judge. This was challenged in
appeal and the Division Bench of the Rajasthan High Court
confirmed the conviction and sentence of the appellant.
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On behalf of the appellant, Dr. Shyamla Pappu, learned
Senior Advocate (A.C.) very ably argued the case. It was
pointed out by her that the evidence adduced by the
prosecution was not sufficient to find the guilt for the
offences he had been charged with. It was contended that
various incriminating circumstances relied on by the court
are not sufficient to draw an inference of guilt of the
appellant and the chain of circumstances was not cogently
and firmly established and these circumstances have no
definite tendency to unerringly point the guilt of the
accused. It was also contended that in a case of
circumstantial evidence, the chain of circumstances should
be so complete that there is no escape from the conclusion
that in all probability the crime was committed by the
accused and none else.
The counsel for the appellant also argued that in the
Exh. P-8 Statement given by PW-17 Shiv Pratap, the name of
the appellant was not mentioned, though he was accompanied
by PW-2 Murlidhar, who is alleged to have seen the appellant
along with one of the deceased prior to the incident. It
may be noted that PW-17 must have been under severe psychic
trauma at the time of giving the Exh.P-8 Statement before
the police and naturally he did not mention the name of the
appellant to PW- 23 who recorded his statement. PW-23
himself recorded the statement of PW-2 immediately
thereafter and in that statement the name of the appellant
was mentioned as the person last seen with one of the
deceased. Another contention urged by appellant’s counsel
is that in the instant case series of injuries had been
caused to the deceased persons and sticks, wooden pestle,
broken handle of axe, scissors and ’kunta’ were alleged to
have been used and it was argued that from these facts, it
is possibe that there must have been more than one assailant
and therefore, the prosecution suppressed the real facts and
the appellant is entitled to the benefit of doubt. All the
articles allegedly used by appellant as weapons of offence
are things which might have been collected from the house
itself and according to the prosecution, the appellant was
seen with deceased Jora Ram in the evening and in all
probability he must have spent the night in the house of
Shiv Pratap. The incident might have happened in the dead
of the night and that being a winter season, it is quite
possible that attention of the neighbours might not have
been attracted. The fact that household items were used as
weapons of offence rules out the possibility of the presence
of any outsider. Moreover, it is also not possible to infer
anything from the nature of injuries as to how many
assailants were involved. It is quite reasonable and
probable that one assailant alone can cause so much of
injuries especially during the night when the victims might
have been in deep slumber.
The counsel for the appellant also raised serious doubts
regarding the various recoveries effected at the instance of
the appellant, but we do not find any reason to disbelieve
the evidence adduced by the prosecution as there is further
corroborative evidence to support the recoveries. The
articles were recovered from the close relative of the
appellant and they were identified by PW-17. It is also
established beyond doubt that the recovered blood stained
shirt belonged to the appellant.
Having regard to the various facts, we do not find any
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reason to suspect the guilt of the accused as it is proved
that the appellant was seen with one of the deceased Jora
Ram in the evening of 14th November, 1993 and the appellant
had an acquaintance with the family members of the deceased
as he had already worked as an apprentice in the shop of
PW-17 to learn the trade of goldsmithy. PW-17 deposed that
the appellant was sent away from the shop as he had
committed some minor gold thefts.
It is also relevant to note that the appellant had some
injuries at the time of his arrest. These injuries are of
minor nature, but even then the appellant could not give any
satisfactory explanation with regard thereto. The recovery
of various articles at the instance of the appellant, that
too immediately after the incident, goes a long way in
proving the guilt of the appellant.
The possession of the fruits of the crime recently after
it has been committed, affords a strong and reasonable
ground for the presumption that the party in whose
possession they are found was the real offender, unless he
can account for such possession in some way consistent with
his innocence. It is founded on the obvious principle that
if such possession had been lawfully acquired, that party
would be able to give an account of the manner in which it
was obtained. His unwillingness or inability to afford any
reasonable explanation is regarded as amounting to strong,
self inculpatory evidence. If the party gives a reasonable
explanation as to how he obtained it, the courts will be
justified in not drawing the presumption of guilt. The
force of this rule of presumption depends upon the recency
of the possession as related to the crime and that if the
interval of time be considerable, the presumption is
weakened and more especially if the goods are of such kind
as in the ordinary course of such things frequently change
hands. It is not possible to fix any precise period. This
Court has drawn similar presumption of murder and robbery in
series of decisions especially when the accused was found in
possession of these incriminating articles and was not in a
position to give any reasonable explanation. Earabhadrappa
@ Krishnappa vs. State of Karnataka (1983) 2 SCC 330 was a
case where the deceased Bachamma was throttled to death and
the appellant was taken into custody and gold ornaments and
other articles were recovered at his instance. This Court
observed:
This is a case where murder and robbery are proved to
have been integral parts of one and the same transaction and
therefore the presumption arising under Illustration (a) to
Section 114 of the Evidence Act is that not only the
appellant committed the murder of the deceased but also
committed robbery of her gold ornaments which form part of
the same transaction.
In another case reported in (1997) 10 SCC 130 [Mukund
vs. State of M.P.], the prosecution case was that in the
night intervening 17.1.1994 and 18.1.1994, the appellants
trespassed into the residential house of one Anuj Prasad
Dubey, committed murders of his wife and their two children
and looted their ornaments and other valuable articles. On
the next night, the appellants were arrested and
interrogated. Pursuant to the statement made by one of the
accused, gold and silver ornaments and other articles were
recovered. This court, relying on an earlier decision
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reported in Gulab Chand vs. State of M.P. (1995) 3 SCC
574, observed :
"If in a given case --- as the present one --- the
prosecution can successfully prove that the offences of
robbery and murder were committed in one and the same
transaction and soon thereafter the stolen properties were
recovered, a court may legitimately draw a presumption not
only of the fact that the person in whose possession the
stolen articles were found committed the robbery but also
that he committed the murder."
In the instant case, the appellant could not give an
explanation as to how he came into possession of various
gold ornaments and other articles belonging to Shiv Pratap
and the members of his family. The appellant also could not
give any reasonable explanation how he sustained injuries on
his body and how his shirt became blood-stained. In the
facts and circumstances, it is a fit case where the
presumption under Illustration (a) to Section 114 of the
Evidence Act could be drawn that the appellant committed the
murders and the robbery. The courts below have rightly held
the appellant guilty of the offences charged against him.
As regards the question of sentence, the counsel for the
appellant submitted that the appellant was a youngster aged
20 at the time of crime and ever since the imposition of
death penalty on him he has been under devastating and
degrading fear that is imposed on the condemned and that
appellant must have been under intense mental suffering that
is inevitably associated with confinement under sentence of
death. It is submitted that these factors had been taken
note of by this Court as relevant mitigating factors to
commute the sentence of death to life imprisonment.
Of course, the nature of the crime committed by the
appellant was so horrendous and exceptionally cruel and
sadistic. However, we are inclined to take a lenient view
having regard to the various facts and circumstances of the
case. In dealing with criminal matters where death sentence
is prescribed in law as the punishment for the crime, the
courts are required to answer new challenges as the object
has to be not only to protect the society at large, but
impose appropriate sentence lest there should be a tendency
to undermine the public confidence in the criminal justice
delivery system.
In A. Devendran v. State of Tamil Nadu [(1997) 11 SCC
720], while considering the question of imposition of death
penalty, this Court observed:- (in para 26)
Bearing in mind the ratio of the aforesaid cases it may
be seen that since the evidence of an approver has been
taken out of consideration the conviction of the appellant
Devendran under Section 302 has been upheld on the basis of
the evidence of PW2, PW5 and the recovery of the pistol
which was used for the commission of murder from the house
of the said Devendran as well as the recoveries of ornaments
and other jewelleries belonging to the informant recovered
from the house of Devendran on the basis of his statement,
while in custody and those jewelleries being identified by
PW4. The aforesaid evidence by no stretch of imagination
brings the case in hand to be one of the rarest of rare
cases where the extreme penalty of death can be awarded.
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Similar is the position in the present case. The
circumstantial evidence discussed above, even though held to
be reliable for convicting the accused, we do not think it
to be one of the rarest of rare cases warranting death
sentence.
Hence, what would be the appropriate punishment?
Crimes, like the one before us, cannot be looked upon
with equanimity because they tend to destroy ones faith in
all that is good in life. A young man was given opportunity
to learn gold-smithery. He was once sent away for alleged
act of theft. Yet again, on the day of incident, he was
permitted to accompany the deceased old man and as per the
evidence, he accompanied the deceased in his house. The
reward of that kindness is murder of old man and his wife
alongwith three daughters including one whose marriage was
fixed after two months. Hence, even though we reduce the
death penalty, we think that punishment should be sufficient
so as to have deterrent effect as well as no further chance
to the accused for relapsing into the crime and becoming
danger to the Society.
Section 57 IPC provides that in calculating fractions of
terms of punishment, imprisonment for life is to be reckoned
as equivalent to the imprisonment for twenty years. In our
view, considering the heinous barbaric offence committed by
the accused, in no set of circumstances accused should be
released before completion of 20 years of imprisonment.
This Court in Dalbir Singh and others v. State of Punjab
[(1979) 3 SCC 745] considered the question that in case
where sentence of death is reduced to life imprisonment, for
how many years accused should be detained in prison. The
Court in paragraph 14 held thus:- 14. The sentences of
death in the present appeal are liable to be reduced to life
imprisonment. We may add a footnote to the ruling in
Rajendra Prasad case. Taking the cue from the English
legislation on abolition, we may suggest that life
imprisonment which strictly means imprisonment for the whole
of the mans life, but in practice amounts to incarceration
for a period between 10 and 14 years may, at the option of
the convicting court, be subject to the condition that the
sentence of imprisonment shall last as long as life lasts
where there are exceptional indications of murderous
recidivism and the community cannot run the risk of the
convict being at large. This takes care of judicial
apprehensions that unless physically liquidated the culprit
may at some remote time repeat murder.
(Emphasis added)
In case of Subash Chander v. Krishan Lal & Ors. [2001
(3) SCALE 130], the said principle is followed by this Court
and it was ordered that accused shall be incarcerated for
the remainder of his life and that he shall not be let loose
upon the society as he is a potential danger.
Question may arisewhether in view of the provision of
Section 433(b) read with Section 433-A Cr.P.C. accused
should be released on completion of 14 years of
imprisonment? For this purpose, we would make it clear that
under Section 433 (b) enables the appropriate Government to
commute the sentence of imprisonment for life, for
imprisonment of a term not exceeding 14 years or for fine.
Under Section 433-A, there is an embargo on that power by
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providing that where a sentence of imprisonment for life is
imposed on conviction of a person for an offence for which
death is one of the punishments provided under the law, such
person is not to be released from prison unless he had
served at least fourteen years of imprisonment. This
question is considered by various decisions rendered by this
Court and by the Privy Council and it has been reiterated
that a sentence of imprisonment for life imposed prima facie
be treated as imprisonment for the whole of the remaining
period of the convicted persons natural life. It is also
established law that rules framed under the Prisons Act do
not substitute a lesser sentence for a sentence of
transportation for life. This Court in State of Madhya
Pradesh v. Ratan Singh and others [(1976) 3 SCC 470] in
paragraphs 4 and 9 held thus:-
4. As regards the first point, namely, that the
prisoner could be released automatically on the expiry of 20
years under the Punjab Jail Manual or the Rules framed under
the Prisons Act, the matter is no longer res integra and
stands concluded by a decision of this Court in Gopal
Vinayak Godse v. State of Maharashtra [(1961) 3 SCR 440],
where the Court, following a decision of the Privy Council
in Pandit Kishori Lal v. King Emperor [(LR 72 IA 1 : AIR
1945 PC 64] observed as follows:
Under that section, a person transported for life or
any other term before the enactment of the said section
would be treated as a person sentenced to rigorous
imprisonment for life or for the said term.
If so, the next question is whether there is any
provision of law whereunder a sentence for life
imprisonment, without any formal remission by appropriate
Government can be automatically treated as one for a
definite period. No such provision is found in the Indian
Penal Code of Criminal Procedure or the Prisons Act.
*
A sentence of transportation for life or imprisonment
for life must prima facie be treated as transportation or
imprisonment for the whole of the remaining period of the
convicted persons natural life.
The Court further observed thus:
But the Prisons Act does not confer on any authority a
power to commute or remit sentences; it provides only for
the regulation of prisons and for the treatment of prisoners
confined therein. Section 59 of the Prisons Act confers a
power on the State Government to make rules, inter alia, for
rewards for good conduct. Therefore, the rules made under
the Act should be construed within the scope of the ambit of
the Act. . . . Under the said rules the orders of an
appropriate Government under Section 401, Criminal Procedure
Code, are a pre-requisite for a release. No other rule has
been brought to our notice which confers an indefeasible
right on a prisoner sentenced to transportation for life to
an unconditional release on the expiry of a particular term
including remissions. The rules under the Prisons Act do
not substitute a lesser sentence for a sentence of
transportation for life.
The question of remission is exclusively within the
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province of the appropriate Government; and in this case it
is admitted that, though the appropriate Government made
certain remissions under Section 401 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure, it did not remit the entire sentence. We,
therefore, hold that the petitioner has not yet acquired any
right to release.
It is, therefore, manifest from the decision of this
Court that the Rules framed under the Prisons Act or under
the Jail Manual do not affect the total period which the
prisoner has to suffer but merely amount to administrative
instructions regarding the various remissions to be given to
the prisoner from time to time in accordance with the rules.
This Court further pointed out that the question of
remission of the entire sentence or a part of it lies within
the exclusive domain of the appropriate Government under
Section 401 of the Code of Criminal Procedure and neither
Section 57 of the Indian Penal Code nor any Rules or local
Acts can stultify the effect of the sentence of life
imprisonment given by the court under the Indian Penal Code.
In other words, this Court has clearly held that a sentence
for life would ensure till the lifetime of the accused as it
is not possible to fix a particular period the prisoners
death and remissions given under the Rules could not be
regarded as a substitute for a sentence of transportation
for life.
In Maru Ram v. Union of India [(1981) 1 SCC 107],
Constitutional Bench of this Court reiterated the aforesaid
position and observed that the inevitable conclusion is that
since in Section 433-A we deal only with life sentences,
remissions lead nowhere and cannot entitle a prisoner to
release. Further, in Laxman Naskar (LIFE CONVICT) v. State
of W.B. and another [(2000) 7 SCC 626], after referring to
the decision of the case of Gopal Vinayak Godse v. State of
Maharashtra [(1961) 3 SCR 440], the Court reiterated that
sentence for imprisonment for life ordinarily means
imprisonment for the whole of the remaining period of the
convicted persons natural life; that a convict undergoing
such sentence may earn remissions of his part of sentence
under the Prison Rules but such remissions in the absence of
an order of an appropriate Government remitting the entire
balance of his sentence under this section does not entitle
the convict to be released automatically before the full
life term is served. It was observed that though under the
relevant Rules a sentence for imprisonment for life is
equated with the definite period of 20 years, there is no
indefeasible right of such prisoner to be unconditionally
released on the expiry of such particular term, including
remissions and that is only for the purpose of working out
the remissions that the said sentence is equated with
definite period and not for any other purpose.
Therefore, in the interest of justice, we commute the
death sentence imposed upon the appellant and direct that
the appellant shall undergo the sentence of imprisonment for
life. We further direct that the appellant shall not be
released from the prison unless he had served out at least
20 years of imprisonment including the period already
undergone by the appellant. As regards offences under
Sections 392 & 397 IPC, we confirm the conviction of the
appellant and no separate sentence is awarded.
With the above directions and modification in the
sentence, the appeal is disposed of.
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