Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE STATE OF PUNJAB
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SURJA RAM
DATE OF JUDGMENT09/08/1995
BENCH:
MUKHERJEE M.K. (J)
BENCH:
MUKHERJEE M.K. (J)
NANAVATI G.T. (J)
CITATION:
1995 AIR 2413 1995 SCC Supl. (3) 419
JT 1995 (6) 383 1995 SCALE (4)689
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
(With Crl. Appeal No. 346 of 1984)
JUDGMENT
M.K.MUKHERJEE, J.
Surja Ram and his three sons Mohan Lal, Vinod Kumar and
Pramod Kumar, all residents of village Puran Patti under the
police station of Fazilka (Sadar), were placed on trial
before the Sessions Judge, Ferozepore to answer charges
under Section 302 read with Section 34 of the Indian Penal
Code for the murders of Tulsa Ram, the elder brother of
Surja Ram, and his son Brij Lal. On conclusion of the trial,
the learned Judge acquitted all of them of the charge
relating to the murder of Brij Lal and also acquitted Vinod
Kumar and Pramod Kumar of the other charge but convicted
Surja Ram and Mohan Lal and sentenced each of them to suffer
imprisonment for life. Against their conviction and
sentence, Surja Ram and Mohan Lal preferred an appeal which
was allowed by the High Court. Assailing their acquittal
these two apeals have been preferred; one by the State of
Punjab (Criminal Appeal No. 448 of 1984) and the other
(Criminal Appeal No. 346 of 1984) by Kamla Devi, daughter of
the deceased Tulsa Ram. Both the appeals have been heard
together and this judgment will dispose of them.
The case for the prosecution, briefly stated, is as
under: Ishar Ram, father of Surja Ram and Tulsa Ram had
divided his lands in three equal shares, one of which was
given to Surja Ram (the respondent no. 1), another to Tulsa
Ram (the deceased) and the third was retained by him. In
terms of the said division, a field known as ‘Diggiwala’
fell in the share of Tulsa Ram and he used to sow Moongi
crops thereon. Surja Ram, however, was demanding a share out
of the Moongi crops from Tulsa Ram, but the latter told him
that as he (Surja Ram) was already in possession of more
land than that fell in his share, he should first give him
(Tulsa Ram) a part of it before he could claim any share in
the Moongi crops. This proposal was however not acceptable
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to Surja Ram.
On April 18, 1982 at or about 5 p.m. Tulsa Ram was
sitting in an open space outside his house while his two
sons Ram Gopal (PW 4) and Brij Lal (the deceased) were away
to the field for raising crops. At that time Surja Ram
accompanied by his three sons came there and started
shouting that Tulsa Ram should be taught a lesson for not
giving the share of Moongi crops. Surja Ram was carrying a
spear, Mohan Lal a pistol, Vinod Kumar a kirpan and Parmod
Kumar a soti. Apprehending danger, Tulsa Ram got up and
tried to rush into his house when Mohan Lal fired from the
pistol hitting him on the back. As a result thereof Tulsa
Ram fell down with his face upwards. Surja Ram then
inflicted a blow, with the spear he was carrying, on the
chest of Tulsa Ram. Immediately thereafter Tulsa Ram died.
Kamla Devi (PW 2), daughter of Tulsa Ram, and Ram Swarup (PW
3) who were inside the house and had earlier come out on
hearing the shouts raised by Surja Ram, cried out for help.
All the four miscreants then ran towards the field shouting
that they would not spare the sons of Tulsa Ram also. Kamla
Devi and Ram Swarup then rushed towards the field where Brij
Lal and Ram Gopal were working. Sighting the miscreants Ram
Gopal fled away but Brij Lal could not succeed in his
attempt as Mohan Lal fired three shots at him resulting in
his instantaneous death. Finding Brij Lal dead, Kamla Devi
came back home and sent Ram Swarup to inform her maternal
uncles, who lived in a nearby village. After Ram Swarup
returned with her maternal uncles Raja Ram (PW 12) and
Kanshi Ram (PW 13), Kamla Devi left for the police station
accompanied by Kanshi Ram. There she lodged a First
Information Report, (Ext. PJ) which was recorded by Sub-
Inspector Bhagwan Singh (PW 18).
After registering the case Bhagwan Singh left for the
place of occurrence accompanied by Kamla Devi and Kanshi
Ram. Reaching there he found the dead body of Tulsa Ram
lying in front of his house. He held inquest thereupon and
sent it for post-mortem examination. He also collected and
seized some blood stained earth from the spot. He then went
to the field where the dead body of Brij Lal was lying.
After holding inquest he forwarded the dead body for post-
mortem examination. From the field he also collected and
seized some blood stained earth. Thereafter he recorded the
statements of witnesses including Ram Swarup and Ram Gopal.
In course of the investigation he arrested the accused
persons and interrogated them. Pursuant to the statement
made by Surja Ram he recovered a spear which was lying under
a heap of cotton sticks in his house. The other accused
Mohan Lal (respondent No. 2) also made a disclosure
statement and pursuant thereto PW 18 recovered a country-
made pistol and three cartridges, which were wrapped in a
piece of cloth and kept buried in a field. On completion of
investigation he submitted charge-sheet and in due course
the case was committed to the Court of Session.
The accused persons pleaded not guilty to the charges
levelled against them and stated that they have been falsely
implicated. They, however, admitted their relationship
inter-se as also with the deceased and the factum of
partition.
To bring home the charges levelled against the accused
the prosecution relied principally upon the ocular version
of the incident as given out by Kamla Devi (PW 2) and Ram
Swarup (PW 3). PW 2 also testified about her having lodged
the F.I.R. at the police station and PW 3 spoke about his
having gone to village Sabuana immediately after the
incident to fetch Raja Ram and Kanshi Ram. To corroborate
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the testimonies of the above two witnesses the prosecution
relied upon the evidence of Dr. S.N. Mittal (PW 1) who held
post-mortem examination upon the two dead bodies and found a
number of injuries on their persons. Besides, prosecution
laid evidence to prove that pursuant to the statements made
by Surja Ram and Mohan Lal (the two accused-respondents) the
offending spear and pistols were recovered. The reports of
the Forensic Science Laboratory, which indicated that earth
seized from near the house of the deceased Tulsa Ram
contained human blood, and of the Ballistic Expert
indicating that the recovered pistol was used in recent
firing were also exhibited. On discussion of the evidence so
adduced by the prosecution, the trial Judge firstly held
that even if it might be concluded that there was no proof
of motive it would not adversely affect the direct evidence
of the eye-witnesses. The trial Judge then discussed the
evidence of the two eye-witnesses. The trial Judge then
discussed the evidence of the two eye-witnesses and found
the same reliable, so far as it related to murder of Tulsa
Ram near his house, notwithstanding some discrepancies
which, according to him, were of a minor nature. The trial
Judge further held that the injuries found on the dead body
of Tulsa Ram by the doctor conformed with the eye-witnesses’
narration of the incident. As regards the other murder the
trial Judge held that the account of the incident as given
out by the two eye-witnesses stood contradicted by the
medical evidence. In drawing the above conclusion he
observed that the fire-arm injuries sustained by Brij Lal
were the result of a single shot but both the eye-witnesses
stated that he had been shot at thrice. Another reason which
weighed with him in recording the order of acquittal in
respect of the murder of Brij Lal was the unnatural conduct
of the two eye-witnesses following the murder of Tulsa Ram.
According to the trial Judge if PWs 2 and 3 had heard from
the accused about their intention to go after the sons of
Tulsa Ram and if they had in fact seen the accused going
towards the fields where Brij Lal and Ram Gopal were working
it was expected of them to raise hue and cry and seek
others’ help. He also doubted the presence of Ram Gopal in
the field. Having perused the evidence on record we find
that none of the grounds canvassed by the trial Judge for
recording the acquittal in respect of the charge for the
murder of Brij Lal is sustainable. However, we need not
detail the reasons for our above conclusion for, no appeal
was preferred against that acquittal and in these appeals we
are only concerned with the question whether the High Court
was justified in acquitting the two respondents of the
charge relating to the murder of Tulsa Ram.
It is trite that while dealing with an appeal against
an acquittal recorded by the High Court this Court does not
ordinarily interfere with it but if it is found that
relevant and reliable evidence on record has been lost sight
of, ignored or brushed aside for reasons which are wholly
unsustainable this Court will not only be justified - but it
will be its duty - to interfere with the acquittal to make
amends for the failure of justice.
From the impugned judgment of the High Court we first
find that it negatived-and in our view rightly-the plea
raised on behalf of the two respondents (the appellants
therein) that since the trial Court had totally rejected the
evidence of the two eye-witnesses in respect of the murder
of Brij Lal there was no guarantee of truth attached to the
self-same evidence in respect of the murder of Tulsa Ram,
with the following observation:-
"There is no gainsaying and the trial
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Court has also held that the maxim
"Falsus in uno, Falsus in omnibus" has
not been applied by the courts in India
but at the same time, what is required
to be judged is as to whether the eye-
witnesses are otherwise reliable, or
not".
The High Court then posed the question as to whether
the two eye-witnesses were reliable or not and answered the
same in the negative with the following findings:
i) The F.I.R. was not a genuine document as it was prepared
at the behest of the Investigation Officer, after he held
inquest, to dovetail with the injuries found by him on the
person of Brij Lal. Consequently, no reliance could be
placed upon the testimony of Kamla Devi, who lodged the
same;
ii) There was no satisfactory explanation for the delay in
lodging the F.I.R. at the police station which was at a
distance of hardly 4 or 5 miles from the spot;
iii) Ram Swarup was merely a chance witness as he was a
resident of a different village and it was a strange
coincidence that he had come from his own village to see
Kamla Devi at exactly 5 p.m. when the incident took place;
and
iv) Considering the matter from the angle of natural course
of human conduct and probabilities, the two eye-witnesses
would not have dared to follow the appelants to the fields,
after seeing Tulsa Ram being put to death , in order to
witness the murder of Brij Lal and if they had really
followed the assailants, as claimed by them, it was more
likely that they would have been attacked by the accused
persons but no such claim was even made.
After a close look to the entire evidence on record we
are constrained to say that each of the above findings is
untenable. Prosecution laid evidence, through PW 2 and PW 18
- which was not controverted - that the F.I.R. was lodged at
the police station at 8 p.m. on 18.4.82. We next get from
the record of the trial Court that on 11.1.1983 the Public
Prosecutor tendered the evidence of a number of witnesses,
including Constable Sukhwant Sing (PW 11), through
affidavits, as he considered their evidence to be formal. On
such tendering of evidence the trial Judge recorded the
following order:
"The accused have no objection to the
admissions to the statements of P.W. 5
to P.W. 11 on affidavits. They do not
wish to cross examine them. I herby
order that the statements of formal
witnesses P.W.5 to P.W.11 be admitted on
affidavits."
The procedure so adopted by the trial Judge was clearly
in consonance with Section 296 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure. Coming now to the affidavit of PW 11 we get
therefrom that on 18.4.1982 at 9.45 p.m. he delivered the
special report to Shri D.R. Arora, the Judicial Magistrate
in charge of Fazilka. PW 11 asserted that he did not delay
the delivery of the special report. The endorsement in the
FIR also corroborates the above uncontroverted statement of
PW 11. Then again it is the categorical statement of the
Investigation Officer - which again has not been controvered
- that he completed the formalities regarding the recording
of FIR by 9.15 p.m. and proceeded for the spot at 10 p.m.
Having regard to the fact that the FIR and for that matter
the special report in respect thereof had reached the
Magistrate in accordance with Section 157 of the code of
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Criminal procedure before departure of the Investigating
Officer from the police station for the spot, the finding of
the High Court that the FIR was doctored at the behest of
the Investigating Officer to fit in with the injuries he
found on the person of Brij Lal at the time of inquest must
be attributed to its non-consideration of material evidence.
Regarding the second finding we can only say that there
was no delay whatsoever in lodging the F.I.R. for it was
lodged by PW 2 within three hours of the incident after
covering a distance of 5 miles. This apart, the sequence of
events as deposed to by PW 2 clearly demonstrates that she
had gone to the police station at the earliest opportunity.
According to her she first sent message to her maternal
uncles through Ram Swarup and only after they came she went
to the police station and her evidence in this regard stands
fully supported by Raja Ram (PW 12), her maternal uncle.
PW12 testified that at 6.30 p.m. Ram Swarup had come to his
village and reported the incident to him. Thereafter he left
for Kamla’s place accompanied by Kanshi Ram. We cannot lose
sight of the fact that PW 2, who was aged only 19 years, had
lost her father and brother just then and it was not
unlikely of her first to apprise her relations of the same
and seek their help at that hour of her distress. The High
Court, however, observed that if really PW 3 was there
nothing prevented PW 2 to go to the police station
accompanied by him as he was the surpanch of his village
instead of getting in touch with her maternal uncles. Simply
because PW 2 did not react in the way the High Court thought
she should have, it ought not have been made a ground for
drawing adverse conclusions against her conduct, which was
clearly normal and natural. While on this point it will be
also pertinent to point out that PW 3 was not a sarpanch of
Kamla’s village.
Coming now to the third finding it must be said that
the High Court ought not to have brushed aside the evidence
of Ram Swarup (PW 3) solely on the ground that being a
resident of another village it was not expected of him to be
present at the spot just at the right time for, there are,
besides his own evidence and that of PW 2, other materials
on record which confirms his presence at the time of the
occurrence. Raja Ram (PW 12) stated in his evidence that Ram
Swarup had come to his house in village Sabuana on April 18,
1982, at or about 6.30 p.m. and gave a detailed version of
the incident. He further stated that accompanied by Raja Ram
he went to village Puran Patti on a motor cycle. In cross-
examination it was not even suggested to PW 12 that his
above statements were incorrect. Another significant fact is
that PW 3’s name finds place in the FIR as a witness to the
occurrence. We do not, therefore, find any reason to leave
the evidence of PW 3 out of our consideration on the ground
that he was a chance witness.
The last finding of the High Court is solely based on
the ground that the claim of the two eye-witnesses that they
had seen the murder of Brij Lal was highly improbable. Even
if we proceed on the assumption that the finding is
unexceptionable still then the High Court was not at all
justified in rejecting their evidence so far as it related
to the murder of Tulsa Ram on that score alone for law is
well settled that when evidence of a witness is rejected in
part a duty is cast upon the court to sift his evidence with
more than ordinary care and caution to find out whether the
rest of the evidence is fully trustworthy, either
intrinsically or by reason of corroboration from other
trustworthy sources. Indeed, as noticed earlier, the High
Court itself negatived an identical threshold contention
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raised by the respondents based on the maxim "Falsus in uno,
Falsus in omninbus".
Now that we have found that the reasons which weighed
with the High Court in recording the order of acquittal in
favour of the two respondents cannot be sustained we have to
ascertain whether the trial Court was justified in
convicting them solely relying on the evidence of P.Ws. 2
and 3. After going through their evidence carefully we find
that they fully supported the prosecution case as detailed
earlier, including the specific roles played by the two
respondents in the murder of Tulsa Ram. Considering the fact
that the incident took place just in front of the house of
Tulsa Ram, P.W. 2 was the most natural and probable witness.
The claim of PW 3 that he was in the house of Tulsa Ram at
the material time has already been found by us to be a
genuine one. He must, therefore, also be held to be a
probable witness. Though both of them were cross-examined at
length nothing could be elicited to discard their evidence
or materially contradict them. Dr. Mittal (P.W. 1) testified
that the deceased (Tulsa Ram) had an incised wound on the
right chest, and an incised wound below base of neck. He
also found four pellet wounds on the dead body besides some
abrasions. When P.W. 1 was shown a spear (Ex. p. 1) which
was seized during investigation he opined that the two
incised wounds might have been caused by one blow with that
instrument as the two wounds communicated with each other.
He further opined that the pellet wounds might have been the
result of a single shot from a firearm. The evidence of the
Doctor, therefore, fully supports the evidence of the two
eye-witnesses. This apart, the F.I.R., which has been found
by us to have been promptly lodged contains a detailed
outline of the prosecution case and thus corroborates the
evidence of P.W.2. The find of human blood near the house of
Tulsa Ram also is a piece of corroboration of the evidence
of P.Ws. 2 and 3. The trial Judge, however, did not lend any
importance to the factum of recovery of the spear and the
pistol pursuant to the statements made by the respondent
Nos. 1 and 2 respectively, on the ground that no blood was
found on the spear and the Ballistic Expect’s report only
indicated that the pistol had been used before it was
recovered but such user could not be connected with the
commission of the crime. We also, therefore, do not find it
prudent to take into consideration the above evidence.
However such non-consideration does not in any way deter us
from accepting the prosecution case as we find that both
P.Ws. 2 and 3 are wholly reliable and their evidence stands
corroborated by other evidence on record.
On the conclusions as above we allow both the appeals,
set aside the impugned judgment of the High Court and
restore the order of conviction and sentence recorded
against the two respondents under Section 302/34 I.P.C. by
the learned trial Judge. The respondents who are on bail
will now surrender to their bail bonds to serve out the
sentence.