Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
OM PRAKASH AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF UTTER PRADESH
DATE OF JUDGMENT11/03/1983
BENCH:
VARADARAJAN, A. (J)
BENCH:
VARADARAJAN, A. (J)
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
CITATION:
1983 AIR 431 1983 SCR (2) 564
1983 SCC (2) 358 1983 SCALE (1)245
ACT:
Code of Criminal Procedure 1973-Section 157-First
Information Report:- Time of despatch-Whether should be
noted in it.
Penal Code-Section 396-Muder and dacoity-Evidence-
Appreciation of.
The deceased was the Pradhan of his village. There were
feuds of various kinds and political rivalries between the
party of the deceased on the one hand and the accused on the
other and a number of cases were pending before the Courts.
HEADNOTE:
The prosecution case against the accused was that on
the night of the occurrence, which was a moonlit night, the
deceased was sleeping in the western room of his house while
his wife and children were sleeping in the eastern room,
between the two of which there was a barotha. In the room in
which the wife was sleeping there was a lighted lantern
hanging from a peg on the eastern wall of that room about 6
feet high from the floor. P.W.8. the brother-in-law of the
deceased was sleeping in a tin shed situate to the west of
the western room. Sometime late in the night the deceased
and his wife woke up on hearing some commotion. They found
that a number of armed men entered the eastern room and
started breaking open the northern door whereupon the wife
of the deceased raised the wick of the lantern to see what
was happening. By the time the deceased entered the eastern
room the accused who were armed with pistols and other
deadly weapons had entered the room after breaking open the
northern door. The 9 accused persons. severely assaulted the
deceased who as a result of the injuries fell down dead. The
accused also assaulted the wife of the deceased (P.W.2) and
her brother (P.W. 8) and ran away with ornaments, cash and
clothes. In the meantime, some of the prosecution witnesses,
who heard the commotion went towards the house of the
deceased and saw in the moon light the assailants leaving
the scene of occurrence. The first information report was
lodged by P.W. 1 in the police station which was six miles
away from the village at 6.05 a.m. On that day.
Before the Sessions Judge the accused contended that
the dacoity was committed by an armed gang not known to the
prosecution witnesses but that they had been falsely
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implicated on account of enmity between them and the
deceased.
The Sessions Judge found that the first information
report had been lodged at the police station without any
inordinate delay or that there was
565
nothing on record to show that there was any oblique motive
for concocting a false story of the occurrence. He, however,
doubted the veracity of the evidence of P.Ws. 1 and 7, that
these witnesses could not have had sufficient glimpse of the
miscreants to be able to identify them. He also disbelieved
the evidence of P.W. 8, the brother-in-law of the deceased.
He, however, believed the evidence of the wife of the
deceased (P.W. 2) that she saw the accused in light of the
lantern hanging on the eastern wall both when they entered
her room as well as when they attacked her husband and
thereafter carrying away properties from the house. The
Sessions Judge also accepted the evidence that P.Ws. 2 and 8
were present in the house at the time of the occurrence and
since they had received injuries at the hands of the
assailants they could see what had taken place and that the
light of lantern and moon light were sufficient to identify
the assailants. He, therefore, acquitted some of the accused
and convicted the appellants and sentenced them to undergo
imprisonment for life.
On appeal the High Court did not think it safe to rely
on any part of the evidence of P.W. 8 but believed the
evidence of P.W. 2 on the ground that she had given
straight-forward evidence without an attempt at making any
improvements to fit it with the testimony of the other
prosecution witnesses. the High Court confirmed the
conviction and sentences awarded to the appellants.
Dismissing the appeals,
^
HELD: There is no substance in the contention that the
first information report was ante-timed; nor is there any
requirement in section 157 of the Code of Criminal Procedure
that the first information report should be despatched
forthwith or that the time of despatch must be noted
thereon. The Sessions judge found that the first information
report had been lodged at the police station without any
inordiate delay and that no oblique motive for concocting a
false story of the occurrence in the first information
report had been established. If the police had intended to
obtain a concocted report, it is more likely that they would
have obtained it from P.W. 8, who was in the house at the
time of occurrence than take it from P.W. 1 who went there
on hearing shouts and sounds. [573 B-D; 575 B]
The evidence on record shows that the formal first
information report was recorded in the police station at the
earliest on the morning of the occurrence, that is, at 6.05
a.m. This had been corroborated with the evidence of P.W.
11, Sub-Inspector of Police, who reached the village which
is about 6 miles away at 8 a.m. and immediately took up the
investigation. [575 B-D; 575 B]
There is no substance in the contention that, having
regard to the size of the eastern room in which the dead
body was found, it was not probable that the 9 appellants
armed with various weapons could have all been present in it
at the same time. The room was sufficiently big and the
first information report stated that the culprits were
moving in and out of the house at the time of the
occurrence. It was not likely that all of them were in the
room at
566
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the same time and it was not improbable that they were seen
by P.W. 2 at different times during the occurrence which
went on for some time. [575 F-H]
Although the explanation of the prosecution for its
failure to examine the doctor who attended the injured
persons was not satisfactory the fact that the witnesses had
stated that they sustained injuries during the occurrence
was not disputed. Therefore, more non-examination of the
doctor for proving the injuries is not fatal to the
prosecution case. [576 C-E]
From the mere fact that none of the looted properties
had been recovered from any of the appellants it could not
be said that they were not the culprits in the case. On the
contrary, there is enough incriminating evidence against
them. [576 G-H]
There is no substance in the contention that there was
no sufficient light in the room to identify the assailants.
Though, the prosecution had not got the lantern identified
by P.W. 2, P.W.11 testified that the lantern was hanging on
a peg on the eastern wall of the room and was in working
condition. This fact was mentioned in the first information
report. P.W.2 woke up on hearing the noise and raised the
wick of the lantern. It was a moon-lit night. All this apart
it was not the case of the appellants that there was no
lantern in the room at all. Nor was it suggested that the
night was cloudy and visibility was poor. [577 H; B-F]
The submission that P.W.2 had modulated her evidence to
fit in with the prosecution case is not well founded. She
had denied the suggestion that unknown persons came to
commit decoity inside the house and that she had falsely
implicated the appellants because she could not recognise
the real culprits. She was undoubtedly in the eastern room
which was the scene of the occurrence and had sufficient
opportunity to recognise the assailants, who were known to
her. During the occurrence she herself sustained many
injuries. [579 D-E]
Merely because P.W. I had not sustained any injury
during the occurrence and had not mentioned the names of any
of the accused to the villagers who entered the house soon
after the occurrence, it is not possible to reject his
evidence altogether. [580 A-B]
The Sessions Judge erred in rejecting the evidence of
P.Ws. 1 and 7 and the High Court erred in rejecting the
evidence of P.W. 8. There is no reason whatsoever for
rejecting the evidence of these witnesses to the extent that
their evidence was corroborated by the evidence of P.W. 2
whose evidence had been believed by both the courts below.
The evidence of P.Ws. 1, 7 and 8 in so far as it goes to
prove the presence of the appellants at the scene of the
occurrence lends assurance to the evidence of P.W.2 that the
appellants entered the house and assaulted her husband
fatally and that some of them caused injuries to her and
committed decoity. The prosecution had proved the case
against the appellants beyond all reasonable doubt. [580 D-
H]
567
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeals Nos.
54 &55 of 1974.
Appeals by Special leave from the Judgment and Order
dated the 21st September, 1973 of the Allahabad High Court
in Criminal Appeal Nos. 1923 & 1918 of 1969 respectively.
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Frank Anthony and K B. Rohtagi for the Appellants in
Crl. A . 54 of 1974.
Frank Anthony, S N. Singh and T.N. Singh for the
Appellants in Crl. A.No. 55 of 1974
S.M.Jain, H.M. Singh and Dalveer Bhandari for the
Respondent in both Appeals.
Devendra N. Goburdhan and D. Goburdhan for the
complainant in both the Appeals.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
VARADARAJAN J. These appeals by special leave are
directed against the dismissal of Criminal Appeals Nos. 1918
and 1923 of 1963 by a Division Bench of the Allahabad High
Court. Those appeals in the High Court were filed against
the conviction of nine accused persons, Om Prakash (A- 1),
Anoop Singh (A-2), Sheo Gopal (A-3), Raj Narain (A-4),
Chandra Prakash (A-6), Mool Chand (A-12), Beni Singh (A-16)
Ram Pal (A-17) and Lajjar Ram alias Raja Ram (A-18)under s.
396 I.P.C. and the sentence of imprisonment for life awarded
to them by the learned Sessions Judge, Kanpur Etawah at
Kanpur in Sessions Trial No. 172 of 1969, in which in all 18
accused persons were tried. The trial Court acquitted the
other nine accused, Bhoop Singh (A-5), Virendra (A-7),
Ramadhin (A-8), Ranjit (A-9), Chhotay Lal (A-10), Chunni Lal
(A-11), Bhanu Prakash (A-13), Dhani Ram (A-14) and Ram Gopal
(A-15) in the alleged dacoity with murder at the house of
Mauji Lal,Pradhan in Makhauli village, at about 1.A.M. in
the night of 16/17.2.1968. In that incident Mauji Lal died
and his wife Ram Shree (P.W.2), Parasuram (P.W.7) and
P.W.2’s brother Ram Shankar (P.W.8) are stated to have
sustained injuries.
The case of the prosecution was this: There was enmity
between the deceased Pradhan Mauji Lal and his brother Baij
Nath (P.W.1) on one hand and the appellants on the other
ever since the
568
deceased Mauji Lal, fought an election battle in 1955 with
Mauji Lal, the father of Om Prakash (A-1) and Bhagwati
Prasad, the father of Raj Narain (A-4). There were several
cases between the parties. About a month before this
occurrence, Mauji Lal had reported by Exh. Ka-7 dated
22.1.1968 that accused persons Om Prakash (A-1) and Sheo
Gopal (A-3) had committed theft of timber belonging to the
village school managed by him. A few days later on 26.1.1968
Mauji Lal had complained before the Sub-Divisional
Magistrate, Ghatampur that Mool Chand (A-12) forcibly
occupied Gaon Sabha land. In 1967 there was rioting in the
village, to which the prosecution party and accused belong.
In that rioting one Ran Sanahi was murdered on one side and
Kanwar Lal was murdered on the other side, and two cases
were registered, and Om Prakash (A-1), Sheo Gopal (A-3), Raj
Narain (A-4), Ranjit (A-9), Chhotay Lal (A-11), Mool Chand
(A-12), Bhoop Singh (A-5), Rampal (A-17), Lajjar Ram (A-18)
and other are accused in one case while in the other case
the deceased Mauji Lal and 14 others including Mauji Lal’s
brother Baij Nath (P.W.1) are accused and those cases were
pending even on the date of the occurrence in this case. Om
Prakash (A-1), Anoop Singh (A-2), and Sheo Gopal (A-3) are
brothers. Raj Narain (A-4), Bhoop Singh (A-5) Virendra (A-7)
and Chandra Prakash (A-6) are brothers. Mool Chand (A-12)
and Bhanu Prakash (A-13) are brothers, Beni Singh (A-16)
nephew of Dhani Ram (A-14) and Ram Gopal (A-15), Ram Pal (A-
17) and Lajjar Ram alias Raja Ram (A-18) are cousins.
On the moon lit-night of 16/17.2.1968 deceased Mauji
Lal who was Pradhan of the village and his wife Ram Shree
(P.W.2) and their children were sleeping in their house in
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Makhauli village, Mauji Lal in the western kotha and PW 2
and her children in the eastern kotha, between which there
is a barotha. There was a lighted lantern hanging from a peg
at a height of 6 feet from the floor on the eastern wall of
the eastern kotha. Ram Shankar (P.W.8) the brother of Ram
Shree (P.W.2) who was assisting his deceased brother-in-law
Mauji Lal in the cultivation of his lands was sleeping in a
tin shed situate west of the western kotha. The deceased
Mauji Lal and his wife Ram Shree (P.W.2) woke up on hearing
some commotion when the miscreants who entered the eastern
kotha of the house were breaking open the northern door
P.W.2 raised the wick of the lantern, material Exh. III,
which had been lowered previously, and there was sufficient
light in the kotha for recognising the miscreants. Mauji Lal
had come
569
into the eastern kotha before its northern door was broken
open by the miscreants. Om Prakash (A.1), Sheo Gopal (A-3),
Anoop Singh (A-2), Raj Narain (A-4), Chandra Prakash (A-3),
Mool Chand (A-12), Beni Singh (A-16), Ram Pal (A-17) and
Lajjar Ram alias Raja Ram (A-18) entered the eastern kotha
after breaking open the northern door with a kulhari, Om
Prakash armed with a pistol and the others armed with Kanta,
ballams, kulhari lathi and pistol. A Pistol shot was fired
through the opening in the door before the miscreants
entered the eastern kotha. These nine accused persons, Om
Prakash (A-1), Anoop Singh (A-2), Sheo Gopal (A-3), Raj
Narain (A-4), Chandra Prakash (A-6), Mool Chand (A-12), Beni
Singh (A-16), Ram Pal (A-17) and Lajjar Ram alias Raja Ram
(A-18) severely assaulted Mauji Lal who died at the spot as
a result of the injuries sustained by him. Sheo Gopal (A-3),
Chandra Prakash (A-6), Beni Singh (A-16), Ram Pal (A-17) and
Lajjar Ram alias Raja Ram (A-18) assaulted P. W.2 severely
and ransacked the house for about 15 or 20 minutes and took
away from that eastern kotha and the adjacent box-room of
the house ornaments, cash, clothes etc., valued at Rs.
2,700/-. Ram Shankar (P.W.8) who was sleeping in the tin
shed, as stated above, woke up on hearing the shouts and
sound of gun-fire and saw accused Virendra (A-7) and
Ramadhin (A-8) standing near his cot armed with lathis and
they inflicted lathi blows on him. When he got an
opportunity, Ram shankar (P W.8) entered the house and
concealed himself by the side wall near the door connecting
the eastern kotha and the barotha and witnessed what was
happening inside the eastern kotha. P.Ws. 2 and 8 could see
the miscreants in the light of the lantern material Exh.
III. Baij Nath (P.W.1), Parasuram (P.W.7) and others of the
village woke up on hearing sound of gun-shot, and proceeded
towards the house of the deceased Mauji Lal and stood under
a neem tree in front of one Banwari Lal’s house and
concealed themselves in the chappra of one Motilal situate
east of the deceased Mauji Lal’s house. They saw the
miscreants when they were departing from the scene, with the
moonlight. The miscreants standing on the roof of Sham Lal’s
house earlier shot at Parasuram (P.W.7) while he was
standing in front of that house and he sustained gun shot
injuries.
About one and a half hours after the miscreants left
the place, P.W. 1 who went inside the house and found Mauji
Lal lying dead with injuries and P.Ws. 2 and 8 having
injured, got the report, Exh. Ka-1 written by one Shankar
Singh. He thereafter proceeded to
570
the Police Station at Mooa Nangar situate six miles away
from the village, and handed it over to the Head Constable
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Ram Kishore Panday (P.W.9). On the basis of that report a
formal FIR was registered at the Police Station at 6.05 AM
on 17.2.1968. Tiwari, the Sub-Inspector of Police (P.W. 11)
took up investigation and reached the village at 8 AM on
17.2.1968 when PW 2 handed over to him a list of properties
which had been looted from her house. P.W. 11 found the dead
body of Mauji Lal in the eastern kotha and the lantern
material Exh. III hanging from a peg in the eastern wall of
the kotha and boxes broken open and the locks thrown in the
verandah.
Autopsy on the body of Mauji Lal was conducted by Dr.
Sharma (P.W. 3), Civil Surgeon, Kanpur at 2 PM on 18.2.1968.
He found six incised wounds, two lacerated wounds and three
abrasions on the body of the deceased. The left eye was
found black. The sculpt bones were found cut through and
through under three incised wounds. The doctor (P.W.3) was
of the opinion that the incised wound might have been caused
by some sharp edged weapons like kanta and axe, that the
lacerated wounds could have been caused with lathi, that the
abrasions might have been caused by coming into contact with
some rough object, that the blackening of the eye might be
due to clotting of blood due to the head injury and that all
the injuries together were sufficient in the ordinary course
of nature to cause instantaneous death. Ex. Ka-2 is the
post-mortem certificate issued by P.W.3.
The injured witnesses P.Ws. 2, 7 and 8 were examined
between 6 PM and 7.30 PM on 17.2.1968 by Dr. Mukherjee of
Chattarpur Dispensary, who could not be examined as a
prosecution witness on account of difficulty due to his non-
availability. The wound certificates, Exh. Ka 18-20, issued
by that Doctor in respect of P.Ws.2, 7 and 8 have been
proved by the Compounder Vishamber Nath (P.W. 13). P.W. 2
had sustained 19 injuries consisting of one lacerated wound
on the left side of the head and a number of contusions and
abrasions on various parts of her body, all caused by blunt
weapons. P.W. 7 had sustained six gun-shot injuries. P.W. 8
had sustained a contusion on the top of his shoulder joint
and an abrasion on the lower aspect of the right clavicular
region, all caused by blunt weapons such as lathis.
That fact the there was enmity between the two parties
and that Mauji lal was murdered and property worth about Rs.
2,700/- from his house was looted in the night of 16
17.2.1968 and that in
571
that incident Mauji Lal’s wife (P.W. 2) and brother-in-law
(P.W.8) were injured and P.W. 7 who came near the scene of
occurrence had received six gun-shot injuries, was not
doubted or disputed before the learned Sessions Judge by the
learned counsel for the defence. But all the accused denied
in their statement their presence and participation in the
occurrence. The suggestion made on behalf of the accused was
that an armed gang of dacoits, not known to the prosecution
witnesses, committed the crime and that the accused have
been falsely implicated on account of enmity. No defence
witnesses were examined.
The prosecution examined. PWs 1,2,7 and 8 as eye-
witnesses to speak about the participation of the accused in
the occurrence. P.W. 1 implicated all the 18 accused persons
as having been present at the time of the occurrence. P.W. 2
implicated only the nine appellants, namely A-1 to 4,6,12
and 16 to 18 as those who entered the house and attacked her
and her husband and committed dacoity. P.W. 7, implicated
fourteen accused, namely Anoop Singh (A-2), Raj Narain (A-
4), Bhoop Narain (A-5), Chandra Prakash (A-6), Virendra (A-
7), Ramadhin (A-8), Ranjeet (A-9), Chhote alias Ram Swarup
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(A-10), Chunni Lal (A-11), Mool Chand (A-12), Bhanu Prakash
(A-13),Dhani Ram (A-14), Ram Gopal (A-15) and Rampal (A-17)
as some of the miscreants who were present at the house of
P.W. 2. P.W. 8 also implicated these nine appellants besides
Virendra (A-7) and Ranjit (A-8).
The learned Sessions Judge found that the FIR (Exh. ka-
1) had been lodged at the Police Station without any
inordinate delay and that there was nothing on the record to
show that there was any oblique motive for concocting a
false story of the occurrence. But he was of the opinion
that the evidence of P.Ws. 1 and 7 does not inspire
confidence, that it could not be believed beyond all
reasonable doubt that those two witnesses had seen the
occurrence, that P.W. 1 would have been fired at if he had
been present at the chappar as claimed by him and that the
probability is that as soon as P.W. 7 received the six gun-
shot injuries in front of Narbada’s house, he would have
either fallen down there or returned to his house. He was
further of the opinion that in any case P.Ws. 1 and 7 could
not have had sufficient "glimpse of the miscreants" so as to
be able to identify them. He rejected the evidence of P.W. 8
about the participation of Virendra (A-7) and Ramadhin (A-8)
in the occurrence as not inspired sufficient confidence and
was of the opinion that the evidence
572
Of P.Ws. 1, 7 and 8 about the participation of the acquitted
accused 5, 7 to 11 and 13 to 15 in the crime was not
acceptable. As regards the participation of the appellants
in the crime he accepted the evidence of P.Ws. 2 and 8. The
evidence of P.W. 2 is that she saw the appellants in the
light of the lantern that was hanging in the eastern wall of
the eastern kotha as soon as they entered her kotha and also
while they were attacking her husband and causing injuries
to her and carrying away the properties from the house. The
evidence of P.W. 8 is that he saw Om Prakash (A-1) when he
was escaping from the tin shed where he was sleeping earlier
to the western kotha and that he saw the other appellants
from behind the door of the western kotha when they were
attacking deceased and P.W. 2 and looting the properties
from the house. The learned Sessions Judge accepted the
evidence of P.Ws. 2 and 8 about their presence in the house
at the time of the occurrence, and also the fact that they
received the injuries at the hands of the miscreants and
could see what had taken place in the light of the lantern
as well as of the moon. Accordingly, he acquitted accused 5,
7 to 11 and 13 to 15 and convicted the appellants and
sentenced them as mentioned above.
The learned Judges of the High Court agreed with the
trial court in not relying upon the evidence of P.Ws. 1 and
7. They were not prepared to doubt the presence of P.W. 8 in
the tin shed of the house of the deceased Mauji Lal and P.W.
2 in view of the fact that he has received injuries at the
hands of the miscreants. But they found it difficult to
believe that on finding an opportunity to move away from the
tin-shed, he would have entered the house and taken shelter
there when the miscreants were in the house and beating the
deceased and P.W. 2. They were of the opinion that P.W. 8
could have been of more help to his sister P.W. 2 by
running to the village abadi for help so that on the arrival
of the villagers the offenders may run away and not cause
undue havoc in the house. P.W. 2 had not mentioned P.W. 8 as
one of the persons who came into the kotha after the
miscreants left the place though, he had mentioned the names
of many other persons who came into the kotha. According to
the learned Judges, P.W. 8 could have seen only some of the
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offenders but he has intentionally made improvements in his
version. For these reasons the learned Judges of the High
Court thought it not safe to rely on any part of the
evidence of P.W. 8. But they were of the opinion that the
incident could have been witnessed only by P.W. 2. and her
children and that there is no substance in the criticism
that independent witnesses have not been called to depose
about the occurrence as eye-witnesses. They were of the
opinion that P.W.2
573
has given straight-forward evidence without any attempt at
making any improvement to fit in with the testimony of the
other prosecution witnesses. They accepted the evidence of
P.W. 2 as wholly reliable and confirmed the convictions of
the appellants and the sentence awarded to them and
dismissed the appeals.
The learned counsel for the appellants submitted that
the F.I.R. Exh. Ka-1 is ante-timed. He drew our attention to
section 157 of the Code of Criminal Procedure and submitted
that the time of despatch of Exh. Ka-1 is not entered there
on. Section 157 only states that the first information
report should be despatched forthwith and does not say that
the time of despatch must be noted thereon. The learned
Sessions Judge has observed in his judgment that Exh Ka-1
seems to have been lodged at the Police Station without any
inordinate dely and that there is nothing on record to show
that there was any oblique motive for concocting a false
story of the occurrence itself in that first information
report. The learned counsel for the appellants invited our
attention to the evidence of Shiv Poojan Tiwari Sub-
Inspector of Moosa Nagar Police Station who had been
examined as C.W. 1. The evidence of CW. 1 is that while he
was raiding Numain Purwa village in a murder case of his
Police Station at about 2.00 A.M. in the night of 16/17-2-
1968 he heard noise coming from the side of Makhauli village
situate 3 miles north of Numain Purwa village and went there
along with some armed police guard at about 4.00 A.M. and
was informed that Mauji Lal had been murdered in his house
and property had been looted from his house by dacoits and
that his brother and certain other persons had gone to the
police station for lodging a report. He has also stated that
he went to the house of Mauji Lal and found his dead body
lying inside the house and that he stayed in the village
until the Sub Inspector of the Police Station concerned
(P.W. 11) arrived at the spot and started investigation. The
learned counsel for the appellants commented on the basis of
the evidence of C.W. 1 that he had not noted the names of
the assailants in the general diary entry made by him in his
police station that the names of the 18 accused including
those of the appellants have been mentioned in the first
information report Exh. Ka-1 only as an after thought. The
relevant portion of Exh. Ka-1 may be extracted in order to
appreciate the contention of the learned counsel for the
appellants. P.W. 1 the author of exhibit Ka 1 who does not
claim to have seen the incident which took place in the
eastern kotha of the house of the deceased has stated in
that report thus :-
574
"Today my brother Mauji Lal was sleeping inside
his house in the night as usual. A lantern was burning
in the house. Smt. Ram Shree (P.W. 2) was also inside
the house. Shri Ram Shankar s/o Manni Lal (P.W.8) was
sleeping under the tin-shed. In the night intervening
between 16th and 17th of February 1968, at about 1.00
O’ clock, the accused persons, having armed themselves
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with kantas, ballams, lathis, axes, guns and pistols
came and surrounded the house of my brother Mauji Lal.
They cut open the door and entered the house. They
inflicted injuries upon my brother Mauji Lal and caused
his instantaneous death. They also caused injuries to
my bhabhi. My bhabhi raised alarm. Ram Shankar was also
assaulted with lathis. He too, raised alarm. On hearing
the shouts and the sounds of guns and pistols I and
Prasu Ram s/o Hira Lal (P.W. 7), Ram Adhar, Ram Kumar,
Ram Prasad Sachan, Banwari Lal s/o Ram Lal, residents
of my village, Beta Lal Sachan of Damodarpur, and
several other persons, reached the spot, saw the
occurrence, and challanged the accused persons. They
recognised them in the light of the moon. My bhabhiji
and Ram Shankar have also recognised the accused
persons in the light of the moon and lantern. Parasu
Ram has also received injuries from the shots of the
gun. There are several injuries on the person of my
brother. After committing the assault, the accused
persons looted away the articles kept in the boxes in
the house, ornaments, clothes and cash etc. The accused
persons kept coming and going outside inside and on the
roof. Out of the accused persons, Anup Singh was armed
with an axe, Dr. Om Prakash with a pistol, Raj Narian
and Mool Chand with kantas, Ram Gopal and Dhani Ram
with guns and Bhoop Narain and Ranjeet with ballams.
The remaining persons were armed with lathis."
The actual part played by either any of the appellants
or any of the acquitted accused has not been mentioned in
this report. It must be remembered in this connection that
while P.W. 1 has named all the 18 accused mentioned in Exh.
Ka-1. P.W. 2 has named only the 9 appellants, P.W. 7 has
named the 9 appellants as also accused 7 and 8 and P.W. 8
has named 14 accused persons. If Exh. Ka-1 was ante-timed as
submitted by the learned counsel for the appellants it is
not probable that the police would have obtained that report
from
575
P.W. 1 who was not one of the residents of the house of
Mauji Lal where the occurrence had taken place but was
admittedly living in his own house situate at some distance
from the house of the deceased and was admittedly attracted
to the scene of occurrence only by shouts and the sounds of
guns and pistols. If the police had intended to obtain a
concocted first information report it is not probable that
instead of obtaining it from P.W. 8 who was indisputably one
of the residents of the house in which the occurrence had
taken place they would have obtained it from P.W. 1. The
evidence shows that on the basis of this first information
report a formal F.I.R. was recorded to the Police Station
situate six miles away from the scene of occurrence at 6.05
A.M. on 17.2.1968. The evidence of P.W. 1 is that he left
for the police station about 1 or 11/2 hours after the
culprits left the place and gave the report which he had got
written by one Shankar Singh. The Sub-Inspector of Police,
P.W. 11 has stated that he thereafter took up investigations
of the case and reached the village at 8.00 A.M. and found
the dead body of Mauji Lal in the eastern kotha and obtained
a list of the looted properties from P.W. 2. In these
circumstances we are of the opinion that the submission of
the learned counsel for the appellants that the first
information report Exh. Ka-1 is ante-timed is not well
founded.
The learned counsel for the appellants next submitted
that having regard to the size of the eastern kotha of the
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house of the deceased it is not probable that these 9
appellants with arms such as guns, pistols, axe and lathis
could have been in the kotha together at the same time at
the time of the occurrence. The evidence of P.W. 2 is that
the kotha is 19 or 20 cubits north-south, 41/2 cubits east
west and 10’ in height The evidence of P.W. 11 shows that
the eastern kotha is 7 1/2, in height. It is stated in the
first information report Exh. Ka-1 that the culprits were
moving in and out of the house of the deceased at the time
of the occurrence. Therefore, it is quite not unlikely that
all the 9 appellants were in the eastern kotha of the house
at the same time and it is not improbable that these
appellants were seen by P.W. 2 at different times during the
occurrence which must have gone on for some length of time
during which P.W. 2 has received as many as 19 injuries. The
deceased and P.W. 8 also received injuries, and P.W. 7 who
was near about the house of the deceased at the time of the
occurrence has also received as many as 6 gun shot injuries.
In these circumstances we are of the opinion that the
submission of the learned counsel for the appellants that
having regard to the size of the eastern kotha it is not
probable that
576
the appellants armed with various weapons could not have
been present in that kotha is not acceptable.
The learned counsel for the appellants next submitted
that Dr. Mukherjee who was in charge of the Primary Health
Centre, Ghatampur on 17-2-1968 and had examined P. Ws. 2,7
and 8 on that day and issued the wound certificates Exh. Ka-
18 to Ka-20, has not been examined and that only the
compounder of that Primary Health Centre, P.W. 13 has been
called to prove those certificates. The reason given by the
prosecution for the non-examination of Dr. Mukherjee is that
he was not available and could not be examined without
difficulty. The explanation for the non-examination of Dr.
Mukherjee is no doubt not quite satisfactory. The learned
Public Prosecutor should have taken steps to procure the
attendance of Dr. Mukherjee for giving evidence about the
injuries noted by him as per Exh. Ka-18 to Ka-20 on the
persons of P.Ws. 2,7 and 8. But the fact that these three
witnesses had sustained injuries during the occurrence in
this case was not and could not be disputed. Those witnesses
have stated in their evidence that they sustained injuries
during the occurrence. Therefore, the non-examination of Dr.
Mukherjee for proving the injuries noticed by him on the
bodies of P.Ws. 2, 7 and 8 as per the wound certificates
Exh. Ka-18 to Ka-20 is not fatal to the prosecution.
The learned counsel for the appellants next submitted
that no property out of the properties looted from the house
of the deceased and P,W. 2 has been recovered from any of
the appellants and that it is, therefore, not probable that
any of these appellants was responsible for the occurrence
in this case. But, as stated earlier, the fact that Mauji
Lal was murdered and property from his house was looted on
the night of 16/17-2-1968 and in that occurrence Mauji Lal’s
wife P.W. 2 and his brother-in-law P.W, 8 were injured in
the house and P.W. 7 sustained 6 gun shot injuries when he
was standing near the scene of occurrence had not been
disputed before the learned Sessions Judge by the learned
counsel for the defendants. The suggestion made on behalf of
the accused was that an unknown armed gang of dacoits
committed the crime and that the accused have been falsely
implicated in this case on account of enmity. Having regard
to the availability of other incriminating evidence against
the appellants, it is not possible to agree with the learned
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counsel for the appellants that from the mere fact that none
of the looted properties has been recovered from any of the
appellants it could be held that the appellants are not the
culprits in this case.
577
The learned counsel for the appellants next submitted
that the lantern material Exh. III has not been put to or
identified by P.W. 2 as the one which was burning in the
eastern kotha at the time of the occurrence. Here again it
is unfortunate that the learned Public Prosecutor has not
got the lantern identified by P.W. 2. But Sub-Inspector of
Police P.W. 11 who had seized that lantern has stated in his
evidence that it was found hanging on a peg on the eastern
wall of the eastern kotha of the house of the deceased and
P.W. 2 and that it was in working condition. The presence of
the lantern in the eastern kotha at the time of the
occurrence as well as of moon light at the time of the
occurrence has been mentioned in the first information
report Exh. Ka-1 by P.W. 1 who is a brother of the deceased
Mauji Lal and a resident of the same village and could be
naturally expected to have gone into the house of the
deceased soon after the culprits left the place. P.W. 2 has
stated in her evidence that it was moon-lit night and the
lantern was burying in the eastern kotha where it had been
hung on a peg fixed at a height of 6’ from the ground on the
eastern wall and that when she heard the sound of some
persons in the court-yard she got up immediately and raised
the wick of the lantern which was until then giving dim
light. She has stated in her cross-examination that the
lantern used to be hung daily on the same peg, that there
was no blackness on the wall near the peg and that she had
scratched it off about 8 days prior to the date of her
examination in the Court. It is significant to note that it
has not been suggested to P.W. 2 that there was no lantern
at all in the room in which she was sleeping with her
children and that her husband Mauji Lal whose dead body was
found by the Sub-Inspector P.W. 11 in that kotha had not
come to that kotha at all. It is seen from the almanac that
the night of 16/17.2.1968 was the third night after the full
moon and that the moon arose at Delhi at 8.43 P.M. on that
day. It has not been suggested to P.M. 2 or P.W. 7 or any
other witness examined by the prosecution that the night was
cloudy and visibility was poor for that or any other reason.
It is not improbable that the lantern was burning in the
eastern kotha where P.W. 2 and her children were sleeping
during the night and that P.W. 2 had raised the wick of the
lantern when she heard some commotion in the court-yard of
her house before the culprits broke open the eastern door of
her kotha and entered the same. Therefore, there must have
been sufficient light in the eastern kotha for P.W. 2 to
note the presence of the appellants who belong to the same
village and were not strangers and for P.W. 8 also to note
the presence of the culprits.
578
There was sufficient moon light for P.W. 1 and P.W. 7 to see
the culprits who are stated to have been moving in and out
of the deceased and P.W. 2 during the occurrence. Therefore,
it could not be stated that P.Ws 1, 2, 7 and 8 could not
have been in a position to identify any of the culprits.
The learned counsel for the appellants invited our
attention to the fact that the learned Sessions Judge has
disbelieved the evidence of P. Ws 1 and 7 and the learned
Judges of the High Court have not relied on the evidence of
P.W. 8 and submitted that P.W. 2 has modulated her evidence
to fit in with the case of prosecution and that the evidence
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of P.W. 2 should not, therefore, be relied upon for basing
the conviction of the appellants in this case. We were taken
through the evidence of P.W. 2 by the learned counsel for
the appellants, and we are of the opinion that the
submission that P.W. 2 has modulated her evidence to fit in
with the case of the prosecution is not well founded. P.W. 2
has stated thus in her evidence :-
"Raj Narain (A-4), Om Parkash (A-1), Mool Chand (A-6),
Anup Singh (A-3), Ram Pal (A-7), Beni Singh (A-9), Raja
Ram (A-8), Shiv Gopal (A-2) and Chandra Prakash (A-5)
cut the northern door of my Kotha with small hatchets
and immediately came in my kotha. I saw and indentified
them in the light of lantern. I know them from before.
All of them were armed with kanta and spears etc. Out
of them Rampal (A-7), Beni Singh (A-9), Lajjar Ram (A-
8), Shiv Gopal (A-2) and Chandra Prakash (A-5)
assaulted me with lathis as a result of which I
received several injuries. My husband Mauji Lal had
come in my kotha before the entery of the accused
persons. The aforesaid accused persons carried out
brutal assault on Mauji Lal with lathis, small hatchets
and kanta so much so that he expired. My brother Ram
Shankar (P.W. 8) was sleeping in a verandah having the
tin-shed. Some persons had reached there as well. They
were assaulting him. His voice was audible at my kotha.
The nine accused persons who entered my kotha had
started looting my articles and they looted several
ornaments and clothes belonging to me. After having
stayed for about 15-20 minutes inside the house of the
accused persons went away outside through the northern
door of my kotha. During the mur-
579
der and loot I did not hear any alarm from the maidan
outside from the atari on the upper storey. Some
accused person fired a gunshot also inside my kotha
from a hole of the door before cutting the same. The
pellet of that shot hit the wall but it did not hit me
or my husband. Om Prakash (A-1) had a pistol in his
hand.
A sufficiently loud noise came out as a result of
firing shots with a gun and a pistol.......... 2 or 3
minutes after the accused persons went away, My Dewar
(husband’s brother) Baijnath (P.W.1) came in my kotha
first of all and along with him Ramadhar, Ram Kumar,
Banwari and Parasuram (P.W. 7) also came".
P.W.2 has denied the suggestion that unknown persons
came to commit dacoity inside the house and that she has
falsely implicated the appellants because she could not
recognise the real culprits. We do not see any reason
whatsoever for not accepting the evidence of P.W.2 who
undoubtedly was in the eastern kotha where the main part of
the occurrence has taken place and must have had sufficient
opportunity to indentify, with the help of the lantern which
was burning, the appellants who were previously known to her
and not strangers and she has received as many as 19
injuries during the course of the occurrence which had gone
on for about 15-20 minutes.
The noise created during the occurrence had attracted
the attention of the Sub-Inspector of police C.W.1 who
belonged to some other police station and was in another
village situate a couple of miles away from the one in which
the scene of occurrence is situate. It is, therefore, not
improbable that P.Ws. 1,7 and others had got up on hearing
the noise and that P.W.1 had moved near about the house of
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his brother Mauji Lal where the occurrence was taking place.
P.W. 1 has named all the 18 accused in his evidence as well
as in the first information report Exh. Ka-1 given by him at
the police station at about 6.05 A.M on 17.2.1968. The
suggestion made to P.W.1 in cross examination is that as
soon as Parsuram (P.W.7) received injuries they became
afraid and did not advance ahead and that he did not reach
the spot and did not see the occurrence with his own eye. He
had emphatically denied that suggestion. The learned
Sessions Judge has rejected the evidence of P.W. 1 mainly
because he had not mentioned the name of
580
any of the accused to any of the villagers who entered the
house of the deceased soon after the miscreants left the
place and also because he has not sustained any injury and
he would not have been left unharmed by the accused if he
was anywhere near the scene of occurrence. Merely because
P.W.1 had not sustained any injury during the occurrence and
had not mentioned the name of any of the accused to other
villagers who entered the house of the deceased soon after
the culprits left the place it is not possible to reject the
evidence of P.W.1 altogether.
The learned Sessions Judge disbelieved the evidence of
P.W.7 having regard to the fact that it is admitted by P.W.1
that P.W.7 belonged to the party of the deceased and that it
was "doubtful" whether P.W.7 could have had a sufficient
"glimpse" of the miscreants so as to be in a position to
identify them. The learned Sessions Judge has further
observed that as soon as P.W.7 received the six gun shot
injuries in front of Narbada’s house he would have either
fallen down there or returned to his house. There was
sufficient moon light at the time of the occurrence and it
is not improbable that P.W.7 who had undoubtedly come near
the scene of occurrence would have seen any of the culprits
and could not identify them. Therefore, it is not possible
to agree with the learned Sessions Judge that no reliance
could be placed on the evidence of P.Ws. 1 and 7. The
learned judges of the High Court have observed in their
judgement that P.W. 8 who was undoubtedly present in the
house in the tin-shed at the time of the occurrence could
have seen some of the offenders and that his evidence could
not be relied upon because he has intentionally made
improvements in his version about the occurrence. They have
also observed that P.W.8 would have helped his sister P.W.2
better if he had run into the abadi and informed other
villagers. We are of the opinion that the reasons given by
the learned Judges of the High Court for rejecting the
evidence of P.W.8 altogether are not convincing. We are
further of the opinion that there is no reason whatsoever
for rejecting the evidence of P.W.s. 1, 7 and 8 of whom
P.Ws.7 and 8 are injured witnesses to the extent that their
evidence is corroborated by the evidence of P.W. 2 who has
been believed by not only the learned Sessions Judge but
also by the learned Judges of the High Court. The evidence
of P.Ws. 1, 7 and 8 in so far as it goes to prove the
presence of the appellants lends assurance to the evidence
of P.W. 2 that the appellants entered the house and
assaulted her husband fatally and that some of them caused
injuries to her and committed dacoity by looting properties
worth about Rs 2,700/-from her house.
581
Thus on consideration of the evidence of P.W.2 and of
P.Ws.1, 7 and 8 to the extent that it is corroborated by
evidence of P.W.2 and the other circumstances of the case,
namely that the door of the eastern kotha of the house of
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the deceased was found broken open, that the dead body of
Mauji Lal was found lying in the eastern kotha of the house
and that the boxes had been found broken open and the locks
were found lying nearby in the verandah of the house, we are
of the opinion that prosecution has proved the case against
the appellants satisfactorily and beyond all reasonable
doubt and that the conviction of the appellants for the
offence under section 396 I.P.C. and the sentence awarded to
them by the learned Sessions Judge and confirmed by the
learned Judges of the High Court are correct. We accordingly
confirm the conviction and sentence and dismiss the appeals.
P.B.R. Appeals dismissed.
582