Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
DEVA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF RAJASTHAN
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 17/11/1998
BENCH:
M.K. MUKHERJEE, G.B. PATTANAIK, S.P. KURDUKAR.
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
C.B.Pattanaik, J.
The appellant has been convicted under Section 302
I.P.C. and sentenced to imprisonment for life and a fine
Rs.200/-, in default, to further undergo imprisonment for
four months by the learned Additional Session Judge, Sirohi
and the said conviction and sentence has been upheld by the
Division Bench of Rajasthan High Court at Jodhpur in
Criminal Appeal No. 141 of 1979. It was alleged by the
prosecution that on 16.10.78 during the morning hours the
cattle of the deceased entered into the field of the accused
Deva and damaged the crop. Accused, therefore, put those
cattle in the cattle pond. Deceased however agreed to give
six Maund of maize as compensation, after which the cattle
were released. The further case of prosecution is that Deva
had gone out and on his return in the evening, there was
some altercation between him and the deceased. PW 14
however intervened and got them separated. In the night,
while accused was sitting at a hotel belonging to PW 7, the
deceased came out of his house and seeing him coming out the
accused left the hotel and inflicted injuries upon him by a
dagger (Chhuri) on the stomach of the deceased. The
deceased then went to his house and informed his wife PW6
that the accused has inflicted the injuries to him by means
of a knife. On this score, there was an uproar in the
village and several villagers went to the house of the
deceased and found injured Samti. Natha PW2, then went to
the Police Station and lodged a report. On the basis of
that report, Exhibit P3, when was treated as F.I.R., the
Police started investigation and ultimately submitted the
charge sheet. On being committed, the accused was tried by
the learned Additional Session Judge.
The prosecution examined 14 witnesses, including the
Doctor PW 1 who had conducted the autopsy over the dead body
of the deceased and the three eye witnesses PWs 4, 5 and 7.
The doctor PW 1 found as many as seven incised wounds and
the cause of the death according to him was shock due to the
injuries, more particularly injury No.2 which led to
internal haemorrhage. On the basis of the medical evidence
as well as the oral testimony of PWs 2 to 7, the learned
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Additional Sessions Judge came to hold that the death of the
deceased was homicidal in nature. The said conclusion was
not assailed in appeal nor has been assailed before us.
From the medical evidence it is established that the
injuries of the deceased were caused by a sharp edged
weapon. The three eye witnesses viz. PWs 4, 5 and 7 though
stated that there was a struggle between the accused and the
deceased did not state that the accused had a knife with him
with which he assaulted the deceased. The learned
Additional Sessions Judge however came to the conclusion
that as the occurrence took place at a place where there was
not much of light and underneath a tree the eye witnesses
might not have been able to see the knife which the accused
was having. Relying upon the recovery of a knife at the
instance of the accused, while in custody and the statement
of PW 6, the wife of the deceased that deceased told her
that Deva had inflicted the knife blow to him, the learned
Additional Sessions Judge came to the conclusion that it is
the accused who has inflicted the knife blow at the
deceased. On the aforesaid finding the learned Additional
Sessions Judge having convicted the appellant under Section
302, the appeal was carried to the High Court. The High
Court confirmed the conviction and sentence passed by the
learned Additional Sessions Judge relying upon the testimony
of PWs 4, 5 and 7 who were supposed to be the eye witnesses
to the occurrence and the evidence of PW 6 who stated that
her husband Samti told her that the accused Deva had
inflicted knife blows on him. The conviction and sentence
passed by the High Court against the appellant is being
assailed in this appeal.
The learned counsel for the appellant contended
before us that none of the eye witnesses having stated that
accused inflicted injury to the deceased by means of a knife
and on the other hand they having categorically stated that
when the accused and the deceased grappled and both of them
fell down on the ground, it was the deceased who was having
a stick in his hand, both the learned Additional Sessions
Judge as well as the High Court in appeal erroneously came
to the conclusion that the injuries on the deceased were
caused by the accused. It may be stated here that PWs 5 and
7 were declared hostile and were cross examined by the
Public Prosecutor as they did not support the prosecution
case. We have scrutinised the evidence of these three
witnesses and fail to appreciate that on the evidence of
these witnesses how the courts below came to the conclusion
that the injuries on the deceased were caused by the
accused-appellant. PW 6, the wife of the deceased no doubt
in her evidence stated that her husband told her that Deva
had inflicted knife injury but in the cross examination it
was elicited that her husband never told that there was a
grappling between him and Deva. All the three eye witnesses
having categorically stated that the accused-appellant had
not given any knife blow on the deceased and on the other
hand, having stated that the accused and the deceased were
grappling with each other when the deceased alone was
holding stick in his hand, it is difficult to accept the
statement of the wife PW 6 that the deceased hand told her
that Deva had inflicted knife injury on him. That apart,
the nature of the injuries are such that on getting those
injuries, blood must have oozed and in that case the eye
witnesses could have easily noticed the same but in fact
none of them have noticed any such blood injury on the
deceased. In this state of affairs merely because the
accused is alleged to have given recovery of a knife while
in custody, it is difficult to hold that prosecution has
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been able to establish charges beyond reasonable doubt and
it is the accused who is the perpetrator of the crime. In
our considered opinion, the conclusion of the learned
Additional Sessions Judge as well as the of the High Court
in the impugned judgment that accused-appellant caused the
injury on the deceased is wholly unsustainable. We,
therefore, set aside the conviction and sentence passed
against the appellant and acquit him of the charges levelled
against him. The appellant be set at liberty forthwith
unless he is required in any other case. The appeal is
allowed.