Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
UMESH SINGH & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF BIHAR
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 10/05/2000
BENCH:
Y.K.Sabharwal, S.R.Babu
JUDGMENT:
RAJENDRA BABU, J. :
On a report made by Jugeshwar Singh [PW-7] alleging
that the appellants herein along with several other persons
numbering about 20 came to ‘Khalihan’ [threshing floor] of
Bhola Singh where he and other members of his family were
threshing paddy. They tried to take away the paddy.
Upendra Singh threatened that any resistance would be met
with such action which might even result in death.
Thereafter Rajendra Singh hit Bhola Singh with a lathi and
Upendra Singh moved backward and fired at Bhola Singh with
gun as a result of which Bhola Singh was hit and fell down
writhing in pain. Saryu Singh was shot at by Rajendra Singh
and Bhagwat Dayal Singh, who was also inflicted a bhala blow
by Arvind Singh, appellant in the connected matter, Umed
Singh and Sheonandan Singh fired at Rajdeo Singh as a result
of which he fell down. When Dharmshila, wife of Bhola Singh
reached the threshing floor with her child aged about one
and half years old in her arm named Rinku, Sheonandan Singh
snatched the child and threw the child on the ground as a
result of which the child died. After investigation, the
police submitted a charge sheet against seven persons named
in the FIR as three of them had died during the pendency of
the investigation. The trial court convicted Sheonandan
Singh and Upendra Singh under Section 302 IPC and sentenced
them to death, one of the accused - Satyendra Singh, was
acquitted and rest of the accused persons were convicted
under Section 302 IPC read with Section 149 and sentenced
for life imprisonment. They were further convicted under
Section 324 read with Section 148 IPC and under Section 27
of the Arms Act. On appeal to the High Court, conviction
was maintained while sentence of death on Sheonandan Singh
and Upendra Singh was reduced from one of death to life
imprisonment thereafter. Appeals have been preferred before
this Court.
In the appeals before us, two of the accused are in
appeal in Crl.A.Nos.824-825 of 1998 while in the connected
appeal Crl.A.No.659/99, Arvind Singh and Bipin Singh have
filed appeals. However, Bipin Singh not being able to
surrender his appeal has been dismissed. In the appeals of
Umesh Singh s/o Sheonandan Singh and Rajendra Singh s/o
Pragash Singh, Shri U.R.Lalit, learned senior advocate for
the appellants, considering the fact that there are four
witnesses (who were injured) and two eye witnesses to the
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incident and their evidence has been believed by the two
courts below, did not pitch their cases too high but
confined his arguments only to certain probabilities arising
even accepting the evidence tendered before the courts below
on the basis of the acts attributed to the appellants. His
submission is that while Rajendra gave a blow to decease
Bhola Singh with a lathi, he could not have intended his
death and the act attributed to Umesh Singh is that he fired
at Rajdeo Singh and no doctor has been examined with
reference to the injuries inflicted upon Rajdeo Singh but
only after post-mortem examination took place, a doctor has
been examined. He addressed an argument that the common
objective was only to take away paddy from the threshing
floor and it was not that it should be one to cause injuries
much less than death to anyone. If that is so, they could
not be attributed vicarious liability punishable under
Section 149 IPC and when Rajendra Singh gave blow with lathi
to Bhola Singh, he could not be stated to be intending to
cause death of Bhola Singh and the gun which is stated to
have been used by Umesh Singh has not been recovered. The
medical evidence tendered also is not very clear in this
regard to support the case of the prosecution as to the
manner in which the incident has taken place. The fact
remains that Rajendra Singh attacked with lathi and the
injuries were sustained by Bhola Singh. As appeared from
the evidence of the doctor PW-5 the injuries on Bhola Singh
include a fracture of the left leg above ankle joint which
was confirmed by dissection. Bhola Singh had received seven
blows on his leg with lathi and several pellet injuries were
found in the front of his chest and abdomen which had caused
damage to the internal system resulting in his death.
Therefore, there is ample evidence on record in the shape of
the evidence of the eye witnesses and the witnesses who had
sustained injuries, sounding a ring of truth to prosecution
case put forward, with the trial court and the High Court
having taken identical views, we do not think there is any
good reason to upset those findings. Vicarious liability,
we may state, as rightly contended for the State by Shri
B.B.Singh relying upon the decisions of this Court in
Shamshul Kanwar vs. State of U.P., 1995 (4) SCC 430 and
Bhajan Singh & Ors. vs. State of U.P., 1974(3) SCR 891,
extends to members of the unlawful assembly only in respect
of acts done in pursuance of the common object of the
unlawful assembly or such offences as the members of the
unlawful assembly are likely to commit in the execution of
that common object. An accused whose case falls within the
terms of Section 149 IPC as aforesaid cannot put forward the
defence that he did not with his own hand commit the offence
committed in prosecution of the common object of the
unlawful assembly or such as the members of the assembly
knew to be likely to be committed in prosecution of that
object. Everyone must be taken to have intended the
probable and natural results of the combination of the acts
in which he had joined. It is not necessary in all cases
that all the persons forming an unlawful assembly must do
some overt act. Where the accused had assembled together,
armed with guns and lathis, and were parties to the assault
on the deceased and others, the prosecution is not obliged
to prove which specific overt act was done by which of the
accused. Indeed the provisions of Section 149 IPC, if
properly analysed will make it clear that it takes an
accused out of the region of abetment and makes him
responsible as a principal for the acts of each and all
merely because he is a member of an unlawful assembly. We
may also notice that under this provision, the liability of
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the other members for the offence committed during the
continuance of the occurrence rests upon the fact whether
the other members knew beforehand that the offence actually
committed was likely to be committed in prosecution of the
common object. Such knowledge can reasonably be intended
from the nature of the assembly, arms or behaviour, at or
before the scene of action. If such knowledge may not
reasonably be attributed to the other members of the
assembly then their liability for the offence committed
during the occurrence does not arise. Tested on this
touchstone, we may safely say that in the present case when
the appellants were members of an unlawful assembly which
was armed with lathis and guns and a declaration had been
made that in the event there is any resistance to take away
the paddy which is stated to have been the original object,
they were willing to take life out of the deceased and take
away the paddy. If that is the position, it is futile to
contend for the appellants that their conviction is in any
way bad. In that view of the matter, we find absolutely no
merit in Crl.A.Nos.824-825/98 and we dismiss the same. So
far as Arvind Singh, appellant in Crl.A.No.659/99, is
concerned, his case stands on a different footing. On the
evidence on record, the learned counsel for the appellant,
was not in a position to point out any infirmity in the
conviction recorded by the trial court as affirmed by the
appellate court. The only contention put forward before the
court is that the appellant is born on 1.1.67 while the date
of the incident is 14.12.1980 and on that date he was hardly
13 years old. We called for report of experts being placed
before the court as to the age of the appellant, Arvind
Singh. The report made to the court clearly indicates that
on the date of the incident he may be 13 years old. This
fact is also supported by the school certificate as well as
matriculation certificate produced before this court which
indicate that his date of birth is 1.1.67. On this basis,
the contention put forward before the court is that although
the appellant is aged below 18 years and is a child for the
purpose of the Bihar Children Act, 1970 on the date of the
occurrence, his trial having been conducted along with other
accused who are not children is not in accordance with law.
However, this contention had not been raised either before
the trial court or before the High Court. In such
circumstances, this Court in Bhola Bhagat vs. State of
Bihar, 1997(8) SCC 720, following the earlier decisions in
Gopinath Ghosh vs. State of West Bengal, 1984 Supp.SCC 228
and Bhoop Ram vs. State of U.P. 1989(3) SCC 1 and Pradeep
Kumar vs. State of U.P., 1995 Supp(4) SCC 419, while
sustaining the conviction of the appellant under all the
charges, held that the sentences awarded to them need to be
set aside. In view of the exhaustive discussion of the law
on the matter in Bhola Bhagat case [supra], we are obviated
of the duty to examine the same but following the same, with
respect, we pass similar orders in the present case.
Conviction of the appellant, Arvind Singh, is confirmed but
the sentence imposed upon him stand set aside. He is,
therefore, set at liberty, if not required in any other
case. The appeal filed by Arvind Singh succeeds to the
extent indicated above. The appeal is allowed in part
accordingly.