Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Curative Petition(crl.) 3 of 2005
PETITIONER:
Sumer
RESPONDENT:
State of U.P.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 29/08/2005
BENCH:
CJI,Y.K.Sabharwal,Ruma Pal & Arun Kumar
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
O R D E R
CURATIVE PETITION(CRL.)NO.3 OF 2005
IN
REVIEW PETITION (CRL.) NOS.864-865 OF 2003
IN
CRIMINAL APPEAL NOS.577-578 OF 1995
Y.K. Sabharwal, J.
Petitioner and seven others were charged for offence under Section
302 read with Section 149 of Indian Penal Code (for short, ’IPC’) besides
other lesser offences, detail whereof are not relevant for considering the
present petition. The accused were convicted for the offences charged
and sentence of rigorous imprisonment for life for offence under Section
302/149 IPC was imposed by Court of Sessions. The appeal of the
accused was, however, allowed by the High Court and the judgment and
order of Court of Sessions was set aside. This Court, by judgment dated
10th December, 2002, allowed the appeal of the State, reversed the
judgment of the High Court and restored that of the Sessions Court.
The review petitions filed by six accused including the petitioner
were dismissed by order dated October 16, 2003 except that the order
makes a note of the fact of the death of one of the accused in the year
1995 and another in the year 1997. In this view, the record was directed to
be corrected to show the appeal having abated against said two persons.
The main charge against the accused was of murder of Ram Lakhan
father of PW1 and one Rajendra son of PW4. PW4 was an injured witness
having sustained gun shot injuries. Besides PW1 and PW4, the Court of
Sessions had also relied upon the testimony of PW2, another eye-witness
produced by the prosecution and who was said to be a neighbour of the
parties. The family of the accused and that of the deceased were
neighbours living in the same village.
This curative petition has been filed by one out of the six accused
and the main thrust of the petitioner is that the evidence and the factors
taken into account by the High Court for disbelieving the testimony of the
eye-witnesses have not been properly appreciated by this Court while
allowing the appeal of the State against judgment of acquittal. The
grounds urged in the curative petition show as if another regular appeal
has been filed to challenge the judgment. Such a petition is an abuse of
remedy provided in Rupa Ashok Hurra v. Ashok Hurra & Anr. [(2002) 4
SCC 388].
In Rupa Ashok Hurra, while providing for the remedy of curative
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petition, but at the same time to prevent abuse of such remedy and filing in
that garb a second review petition as a matter of course, the Constitution
Bench said that except when very strong reasons exist, the Court should
not entertain an application seeking reconsideration of an order of this
Court which has become final on dismissal of review petition. In this view,
strict conditions including filing of certificate by a senior advocate were
provided in Rupa Ashok Hurra. Despite it, the apprehension of the
Constitution Bench that the remedy provided may not open the flood gates
for filing a second review petition has come true as is evident from filing of
large number of curative petitions. It was expected that the curative
petitions will be filed in exceptional and in rarest of rare case but, in
practice, it has just been opposite. This Court, observing that neither it is
advisable nor possible to enumerate all the grounds on which curative
petition may be entertained, said that nevertheless the petitioner is entitled
to relief ex debito justitiae if he establishes (1) violation of principles of
natural justice in that he was not a party to the lis but the judgment
adversely affected his interests or, if he was a party to the lis, he was not
served with notice of the proceedings and the matter proceeded as if he
had notice, and (2) where in the proceedings a learned Judge failed to
disclose his connection with the subject-matter or the parties giving scope
for an apprehension of bias and the judgment adversely affects the
petitioner. To restrict the filing of the curative petitions only in genuine
cases, Rupa Ashok Hurra provided that the curative petition shall contain
a certification by a senior advocate with regard to the fulfillment of all the
requirements provided in the judgment. Unfortunately, in most of the
cases, the certification is casual without fulfilling the requirements of the
judgment.
The certificate, in the present case, reads as under :
"CERTIFICATE OF THE SENIOR ADVOCATE
Certified that I have carefully examined the above
Curative Petition. It appears to me that non-
consideration of (a) several discrepancies in
recording the FIR and several interpolations in the
FIR and the inquest report and (b) absence of
findings that the judgment of High Court is
perverse and is such that no prudent person
would arrive to the conclusion as reached by the
High Court constitute sufficient reasons to
entertain the petition seeking reconsideration of
judgment/order of this Hon’ble Court dated
16.10.2003. The Curative petition also fulfils the
requirements as laid down in the judgment of this
Hon’ble Court in Rupa Ashok Hurra Versus
Ashok Hurra (2002) 4 SCC 388."
The certificate itself shows that the object is to seek fresh
examination of facts after the decision of the appeal and dismissal of the
review petition. The certificate does not fulfill the requirements of Rupa
Ashok Hurra.
In the judgment dated 10th December, 2002, this Court, on
appreciation of evidence, came to the conclusion that the High Court in a
highly cursory and cavalier fashion, totally ignoring the evidence of eye-
witnesses, had set aside the convictions merely on the ground that the
investigation was faulty pointing out some minor discrepancies in the
evidence and deprecated the manner of decision of a serious case where
at least eight accused persons formed an unlawful assembly and armed
with lethal weapons committed the murder of two persons belonging to
same family and seriously injured a third person, the motive of the crime
being land dispute between the family of the victim and the accused
persons. The Bench held that unfortunately the High Court remained on
the periphery and never attempted to grapple with the substance of the
evidence on record. This peripheral approach of the High Court led to the
impugned judgment of acquittal being passed. The Court came to the
conclusion that the evidence of the eye-witnesses completely proves the
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prosecution case and the doubt thrown by the High Court on the presence
of the eye-witnesses at the time of occurrence is wholly unacceptable.
This Court held that on the evidence on record, the High Court committed
grave illegality in reversing a well-considered judgment of the Sessions
Court.
The curative petition has been filed, inter alia, contending that the
petitioner was allegedly armed with a lathi, none of injury found on the
dead-body was attributable to a lathi and that the petitioner is not said to
have given any exhortation and, therefore, his false implication was
apparent. The conviction of the petitioner was for offence under Section
302 read with 149 IPC being a member of an unlawful assembly and not
conviction simpliciter under Section 302 IPC. Section 149 provides that if
an offence is committed by any member of an unlawful assembly in
prosecution of the common object of that assembly, or such as the
members of that assembly knew to be likely to be committed in
prosecution of that object, every person who, at the time of the committing
of that offence, is a member of the same assembly, is guilty of that offence.
The members of unlawful assembly were carrying lethal weapons and
committed murder of two persons of the same family and seriously injured
the third person, all with gun-shots. The finding is that the petitioner was a
member of such unlawful assembly and, therefore, the question of
attributing any role to him was wholly inconsequential. Another ground
taken is that there are major contradictions in regard to the time of
registration of FIR and that inadvertently it was not brought to the notice of
this Court that there was enmity between accused family and the
complainant family. The Bench has noticed in detail the enmity between
the two families but has come to the conclusion that that by itself, is not a
ground to disbelieve eye-witnesses including an injured eye-witness. The
curative petition seeks to highlight following factors for disbelieving the
testimony of the eye-witnesses :
i) They were partisan, hostile and inimical.
ii) PW1 could not have written the FIR in the
manner alleged.
iii) Interpolation of the FIR.
iv) Nature of injuries on PW4.
v) Their attempt to improve the prosecution
case.
All the aforesaid aspects have been considered by this Court in the
judgment dated 10th December, 2002. A perusal of the grounds taken in
the curative petition makes it clear that the attempt is to have another
opportunity for reappreciation of evidence. Such a course is
impermissible.
Ordinarily, a curative petition of this nature deserves dismissal by
imposing exemplary cost on the petitioner but, in the present case, we
refrain from imposing cost considering that the petition arises out of a
criminal appeal.
For the aforesaid reasons, the petition is dismissed.