Full Judgment Text
INSPECTOR OF POLICE, T.N.
v.
PALANISAMY @ SELVAN
(Criminal Appeal No. 177 of 2003)
OCTOBER 1, 2008
[DR. ARIJIT PASAYAT AND DR. MUKUNDAKAM
SHARMA, JJ.]
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
DR. ARIJIT ASAYAT, J. Heard.
The State of Tamil Nadu questions the correctness of the
judgment rendered by a Division Bench of the Madras High Court
directing acquittal of the respondent. Learned Addiitonal Sessions
Judge, Erode had found the respondent guitly of offence punishable
under Section 302, Indian Penal Code (in short ‚IPC‘) and convicted
him accordingly and sentenced him to undergo imprisonment for life.
The case at hand rests on circumstantial evidence. The first
circumstance which was highlighted by the prosecution was that
Pws. 1 and 2 allegedly saw the deceased in the company of the
accused around 11 0' clock in the night. The second was an alleged
extra judicial confession before PW3 the village head. Though the
trial Court placed reliance on these factors to find the accused guilty
the High Court found the evidence of Pws. 1 and 2 to be unreliable
so far as the claim to have seen accused and the deceased together
around 11 0‘clock in the night. Similarly the High Court found that the
so-called extra judicial confession has not been established by PW3.
Learned counsel for the appellant-State submitted that the High
Court should not have discarded the evidencne of Pws 1 and 2 so far
as the last seen aspect is concerned. Similarly, the High Court
should not have disbelieved PW3 about the alleged extra judicial
confession. Learned counsel for the respondent supported the
judgment of the High Court.
We find that the High Court has analysed the evidence in great
detail and we find that the evidence of Pws 1 and 2 is not truthful so
far identification aspect is concerned. Undisputedly it was a dark
night. They claimed to have identified them from their voice. Though
such identification in some cases is possible in the instant case no
evidence was adduced to show that the witnesses were closely
acquainted with the accused to even identify him from his voice, that
too from a very short replies, purported to have been given. This fact
was lost sight of by the Trial court. The High Court found the
possibility of identification as claimed by Pws 1 and 2 an
impossibility. So far the purported extra judicial confession is
concerned the High Court found that the same also has not been
established through the evidence of PW3. The reasons given by the
High Court to discard the evidence of PW3 do not suffer from any
infirmity. The High Court after analysing the evidence concluded as
follows:
‚ First we analysed the evidence of PW3 to find out whether the
prosecution had established that the accused had given the
extra judicial confession to him. PW 3 would state that the
accused appeared before him on 12.6.1991 around 9.00 a.m.
and confessed. The occurence was on 5.6.1991 and Nagarajan
was found dead in the early morning on 6.6.1991. PW3 is the
former President of the Village Panchayat Board of
Kalangapalayam. If really the accused appeared before him and
gave the extra judicial confession, then prudence on his part
demands that he should have surrendered the accused at the
police station. He being responsible witness and on that day not
holding any office, nothing prevented him to reduce into writing
the extra judicial confession given by the accused. But, he would
state that he only advised the accused to go and surrender at
the police station for which the accused was not willing.
Thereafter, he claims to have advised the accused to surrender
in court with the help of a lawyer. These two advises as stated
above which was given by PW3 shows without any doubt that he
is a man who knows what to be done when an offender appears
before him. Inspite of the accused appearing before him, he had
not chosen to reduce into writing the extra judicial confession of
the accused or produce him at the police sation. On the contrary,
he would state that on 12.6.1991 in the night he went to the
polcie station and informed the police officer about the extra
judicial confession given by the accused. What PW3 was doing
right from 9.00 a.m. on 12.6.1991, at which point of time the
accused appeared before him and gave the extra judicial
confession, till late in the night is a suspicious circumstances
which make us to disbelieve his oral evidence.’
The appeal is dismissed.