Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF RAJASTHAN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ANI @ HANIF AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 13/01/1997
BENCH:
A.S. ANAND, K.T. THOMAS
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
THOMAS J.
It was a jinxed bus journey for Phool Chand and
Dwarkalal as both of them were murdered by armed assailants
and also for Badri Las (PW-3) who too was travelling in the
same bus. However, Badri Las survived despite being badly
mangled by the assailants. The case was registered on his
complaint and the present six respondents were challenged by
the police for various offences. Sessions Court convicted
them under Section 302, 307 and 236 read with Section 149 of
the Indian Penal Code besides other lesser offences relating
to unlawful assembly. But High Court of Rajasthan, on appeal
by the respondents, acquitted them all. This appeal by
special leave has been filed by the State of Rajasthan
challenging the said order of acquittal.
The double murder happened around 8.00 a.m. on
23.12.1983 at Simalia (Kota District). Prosecution case is,
shortly, this: Badrilal (PW3) along with brother Phool Chand
and Dwarkalal were travelling in a bus for reaching the
court where they had to appear as accused in a case. His
uncle Gopal (PW18) was also travelling with them. When the
bus reached Simalia some passengers went out for tea break.
Respondents variously armed with swords and hatchets etc.
boarder the bus at that stop and unleashed a blitz on Phool
Chand, Dwarkalal and Badrilal with the weapons. They dragged
Phool Chand and Dwarkalal out of the bus and continued to
shower blows on them. As the victims became motionless they
turned to Badri Lal and dragged him also out of the bus and
showered him with blows. Respondents left the place when
Badri Lal became motionless. Phool Chand and Dwarkalal died
at the spot, but since Badri Lal was not destined to die he
was escorted to the hospital where his life was saved by
prompt medical attention.
DIG of Kota region Shri Shankar Sharan was going by
that way in a car with a constable Ram Kumar (PW-11). As
they reached the spot where the incident took place they
heard from the people of a blurred account of what happened.
So the IDG made arrangements for immediate ambulancing of
Badrilal to the hospital. He sent a wireless message to
Sultanpur Police Station and pursuant to it the SHO PW-22
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(Aasu Sing) reached the spot. He recorded the statement of
PW-25 at 9.25 A.M. which was used for preparing FIR in this
case.
Respondents were arrested on 26.12.1983 and the police
recovered incriminating articles on the strength of
informations elicited from them.
Dr. Shivachandra Misra (PW-9) who conducted the autopsy
on the dead bodies of the two deceased has described the
injuries found on them. Among the injuries perforation on
the carotid artery on both the deceased became the cause for
their instantaneous death. Dr. Chander Mohan Srivastava (PW-
13) examined Badri Lal on the same day and found six incised
injuries besides some fractures.
There is no dispute that Phool Chand and Dwarkalal as
also Badri Las (PW-3) were subjected to a violent attack at
the bus stop of Samalia on the morning hours on 23.12.1983.
Respondents only disputed about their involvement in the
incident. So the crucial question which High Court had to
consider was whether appellants were the assailants who
launched attack on the deceased and injured. Learned Judges
found that it was not possible to attach credence to the
testimony of Gopal (PW-18) and Badrilal (PW-3). Learned
counsel who argued for the State of Rajasthan contended that
the said finding was the result of misreading the evidence
and a consequence of over-looking the testimony of an
important witness Ram Kumar (PW-11).
PW-3 (Badri Lal) has stated in his evidence that all
the six respondents went to the bus armed with swords and
hatchets and he mentioned the different roles played by each
respondent in this gory incident. But in the first
information statement he named first respondent Hanifa,
third respondent Gani Mohd., fifth respondent Abdul Kayam @
Babu and sixth respondent Guddu @ Guddi, and not the names
of second respondent (Abdul Salim) and fourth respondent
(Ishak Mohd.) though he said that there were two other
assailants also whose names he did not know. He was not
subjected to any test identification parade and therefore,
we do not have the advantage of Badri Lal’s earliest version
identifying second and fourth respondent.
The motive alleged by PW-3 (Badri Lal) for this planned
onslaught was the murder of Hameed - the eldest brother of
the respondents. It is not disputed that Phool Chand and
Dwarka Lal (the deceased) and Badri Lal were the accused in
that murder case.
The High Court, having found that presence of PW-3 at
the place of occurrence has been indisputably established,
sidelined his testimony with a sweeping remark that it is
"full of contradictions, inconsistencies and
improbabilities". Learned Judges did not cite a single
material from PW-3’s narration of the occurrence as proof of
inconsistency. Of course it is pointed from the evidence of
PW-3 that appellants had covered their faces and
subsequently PW-3 has corrected it when the court put a
question on that aspect. In the deposition of PW-3 the
following questions and answers have been recorded as part
of cross-examination:
Question: The correct thing is that those assaulters covered
their faces and hence you could not recognise who
had beaten whom?
Answer: This is correct that the persons who came with the
intention of killing had covered their faces.
The trial Judge then put a question as this:
Question: Once you have stated that the accused persons had
covered their faces and then you have stated that
they were not covering their faces. Which is the
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correct statement out of those two?
Answer: Nizam met me on the way and his face was covered.
But the persons who boarded the bus had never
covered their face.
Learned Judges of the High Court have observed that the
said explanation offered by PW-3 is not believable at all.
When the trial judge noticed that PW-3 Badri Lal was in a
bit of confusion during cross-examination he put a question
to get the confusion clarified. If the witness has corrected
an error slipped out of his tongue there is no justification
terming his evidence as "not at all believable",
particularly since the High Court has found that presence of
PW-3 at the scene of occurrence during the relevant time is
indisputable.
Shri Sushil Kumar, learned senior counsel criticised
the manner in which the trial Judge had put the question.
Counsel submitted that when the cross-examiner has
successfully elicited a pivotal answer from PW-3 it was
improper for the court to have interjected to upset the
trend.
We are unable to appreciate the above criticism.
Section 165 of the Evidence Act confers vast and
unrestricted powers on the trial court to put "any question
he pleases, in any form, at any time, of any witness, or of
the parties, about any fact relevant or irrelevant" in order
to discover relevant facts. The said section was framed by
lavishly studding it with the word "any" which could only
have been inspired by the legislative intent to confer
unbridled power on the trial court to use the power whenever
he deems it necessary to elicit truth. Even if any such
question crossed into irrelevancy the same would not
transgress beyond the contours of powers of the court. This
is clear from the words "relevant or irrelevant" in Section
165. Neither of the parties has any right to raise objection
to any such question.
Reticence may be good in many circumstances, but a
judge remaining mute during trial is not an ideal situation.
A taciturn Judge may be the model caricatured in public
mind. But there is nothing wrong in his becoming active or
dynamic during trial so that criminal justice being the end
could be achieved. Criminal trial should not turn out to be
a bout or combat between two rival sides with the judge
performing the role only of a spectator or even an umpire to
pronounce finally who won the race. A judge is expected to
actively participate in the trial, elicit necessary
materials from witnesses at the appropriates context which
the feels necessary for reaching the correct conclusion.
There is nothing which inhibits his power to put questions
to the witnesses, either during chief examination or cross-
examination or even during re-examination to elicit truth.
The corollary of it is that if a judge felt that a witness
has committed an error or a slip it is the duty of the judge
to ascertain whether it was so, for, to err is human and the
chances of erring may accelerate under stress of nervousness
during cross-examination. Criminal justice is not to be
founded on erroneous answers spelled out by witnesses during
evidence collecting process. It is a useful exercise for
trial judge to remain active and alert so that errors can be
minimised.
In this context it is apposite to quote the
observations of Chinnappa Reddy, J. in Ram Chander vs. The
State of Haryana (AIR 1981 SC 1036):
"The adversary system of trial
being what is is, there is an
unfortunate tendency for a judge
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presiding over a trial to assume
the role of a referee or an umpire
and to allow the trial to develop
into a contest between the
prosecution and the defence with
the inevitable distortions flowing
from combative and competitive
elements entering the trial
procedure. If a Criminal Court is
to be an effective instrument in
dispensing justice, the presiding
judge must cease to be a spectator
and a mere recording machine. He
must become a participant in the
trial by evincing intelligent
active interest by putting
questions to witnesses in order to
ascertain the truth."
We respectfully concur with the aforesaid observations.
We find no wrong in the trial court interjecting during
cross-examination of PW-3 with a view to ascertain the
correct position.
Another reason advanced by the High Court for
jettisoning the evidence of PW-3 - Badri Lal - is that he
did not concur with the police version that the First
Information Statement was recorded at 9.55 A.M. True PW-3
said that his statement was recorded by the police during
evening. Learned counsel who argued for the State of
Rajasthan submitted that PW-3 (Badri Lal) would have lost
his sense of time in the agony of excruciating pain suffered
by him on account of serious injuries sustained. We are of
the view that the discrepancy regarding the time of
recording First Information Statement, on the facts of this
case, is not enough to castigate the testimony of an
important eye witness, whose presence at the spot cannot in
any way be doubted. The maximum consequence which such
discrepancy may visit, on the facts of this case, is that
the First Information Statement cannot be used to
corroborate the evidence of the maker of it.
In this context we may refer to the testimony of PW-18
Gopal. That witness had identified the appellants as the
assailants in the incident in a test identification parade
conducted by a Judicial Magistrate of 1st Class (PW-12). But
the High Court did not accept his evidence for the main
reason that his name was absent in the First Information
Statement and further that the appellants after arrest, were
paraded openly which would have impaired the value of the
test identification parade considerably.
PW-18 - Gopal is none other than the uncle of Phool
Chand and was staying with his nephew and he stated that on
the date of occurrence he too accompanied his nephew who was
proceeding to appear in the court for the case. PW-18 said
that when the incident started he tried to protect the
injured by catching hold on one of the weapons used by the
assailants and that resulted in an injury on his palm. Dr.
Shivchandra Misra (PW-9) had examined PW-18 on 24-12-1983
and found a skin deep incised wound of 1x1/18 inches on his
left thumb. Learned Sessions Judge found the evidence of PW-
18 quite believable.
We are of the view that the evidence of PW-18 Gopal
should never have been rejected merely because Badri Lal did
not name him in the First Information Statement. The
condition of the maker of the First Information Statement
should have been borne in mind - whether he was in a
position to reproduce the vivid details of the occurrence
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including making reference to all the persons who would have
witnessed the occurrence. Similarly the defence contention
that accused were openly paraded by the police is not
supported by any reliable material on evidence.
We cannot overlook the evidence of yet another
important witness in this case - PW-11 - Ram Kumar. He was
the staff officer on duty attached to the DIG of Police. He
reached the place of occurrence along with the DIG soon
after the occurrence as they were proceeding to some other
place on this route. They saw the two deceased and the
injured (PW-3) lying near the bus and got an account from
the people crowded there as to what had happened. After
sending a wireless message to Kota Central Control Room the
DIG and PW-11 proceeded towards Bhonsa Village and found a
bullock-cart on the way in which respondents were
travelling. As they were armed with swords and hatchets, DIG
advisedly chose for re-inforcement of police personnel for
nabbing the armed men and hence they went to the nearest
police station and with a posse of police proceeded to
village Bhonsa. But unfortunately during this interval the
assailants escaped. This is the substance of the evidence of
PW-11.
No doubt there is scope for criticism that if the DIG
had been more discreet he could have succeeded in nabbing
the miscreants on the same day. But that is a different
matter altogether. The fact remains that DIG and PW-11 could
see the armed persons and PW-11 identified the respondents
in this case as those armed persons. Unfortunately the High
Court has overlooked this very important piece of evidence.
About the evidence relating to recovery of blood-
stained swords, hatchets and shoes pursuant to the
information elicited from the respondents after the arrest
the High Court observed that the same could be used only for
corroborative purpose. However, the High Court did not
dissent from the trial court’s view regarding its
reliability.
In the light of the above reasoning we have absolutely
no doubt that PW-3 (Badrilal) has correctly identified A-1
the first respondent - Hanif, 3rd respondent Gani Mohammed,
5th respondent Abdul Duayum @ Babu and 6th respondent Guddu
@ Guddi, whose names he mentioned in the First Information
Statement. However, we find weight for the contention of
learned counsel that PW-3’s evidence is not sufficient to
establish the case against second and fourth respondents
(Abdul Salim and Ishaq Mohammad) who were not named by him
in the First Information Statement. Police did not involve
PW-3 in the test identification parade. We are, therefore,
persuaded to give benefit of the said doubt to those
respondents.
Resultantly, we set aside the order of acquittal passed
by the High Court as for first respondent - Hanif, 3rd
respondent - Gani Mohammad, 5th respondent - Abdul Duayum @
Babu and 6th respondent - Gaddu @ Guddi are concerned. The
conviction and sentence passed by the sessions court on
those respondents are hereby restored. We direct the
Sessions Judge, Kota to take immediate steps to put those
respondents back in jail for undergoing the sentence passed
on them.