Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAMJI RAI & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF BIHAR
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 13/10/1999
BENCH:
N.S.Hegde, G.B.Patmaik
JUDGMENT:
SANTOSH HEGDE, J.
The Ist Additional Sessions Judge, Motihari, East
Champaran District, State of Bihar by his Judgment dated
28th of July, 1992 delivered in Sessions Trial No.180/29 of
1991 convicted 21 persons, for the offences punishable under
Sections 302, 302/149, 148, 324, 380, 307/149 and punished
them as follows :
Accused Banka Rai, Durbal Rai, Bacha Rai and Hira Rai
were convicted for offence under Section 302 IPC and were
sentenced to death. Accused Chhota Rai, Krishna Rai,
Ramprit Rai, Mofil Rai, Wakil Rai, Baijnath Rai, Dharmjeet
Rai, Lal Babu Rai, Ambika Rai and Bindeshwar Rai were
convicted under Section 302 read with Section 149 IPC and
were sentenced to undergo rigorous imprisonment for life.
All the above 14 accused were further found guilty of
offence under Section 148 IPC and among them Banka Rai,
Durbal Rai, Bacha Rai, Chhota Rai and Krishna Rai were also
found guilty of offence under Section 307 read with Section
149 IPC. Accused Ramprit Rai, Krishna Rai and Banka Rai
were convicted for offence under Section 324 IPC and accused
Ramprit Rai was further convicted under Section 380 IPC but
in view of the capital sentence or life imprisonment awarded
on them separate sentences on the above counts were not
awarded. Among the rest of the accused, namely, Jamadar
Rai, Nathuni Rai, Darshan Rai, Laxman Mahto, Bishnudeo Mahto
and Ramjeet Rai were convicted under Section 148 IPC and
were sentenced to undergo three years rigorous imprisonment
on that count. Accused Jamadar Rai, Nathuni Rai and Darshan
Rai were further convicted under Section 380 IPC and they
were sentenced to undergo rigorous imprisonment for three
years each. Lastly, accused Hira Rai was convicted for
offence under Section 147 IPC and sentenced to undergo
rigorous imprisonment for two years. The sentences passed
on different counts were directed to run concurrently. The
trial court acquitted 10 other accused persons giving them
the benefit of doubt. Against the said judgment and
conviction, the aggrieved persons preferred three Criminal
Appeals, Crl.A.Nos. 281, 285 and 321 of 1992 before the
High Court of Patna and consequent to the awarding of death
sentence against four of the accused, named above, a
Reference Case No.883-A of 1990 was also preferred before
the High Court at Patna. The High Court as per its judgment
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dated 18th of August, 1995 dismissed the appeals preferred
by the convicted accused persons and also rejected the
reference made to it for confirmation of the death sentence
and consequently modified the said sentence of death imposed
on the four of the appellants to that of life imprisonment.
Against the said judgment of the High Court, the convicted
accused have preferred the above noted criminal appeals.
This Court, while entertaining the above appeal, issued suo
motu rule for enhancement of sentence of life imprisonment
to death sentence in regard to accused persons Bacha Rai,
Banka Rai and Durbal Rai who were three of the four persons
sentenced to death by the trial court. The prosecution case
as narrated in the courts below stated briefly is as follows
:-
PW-16 Rajendra Rai son of one of the deceased, namely,
Jaimangal Rai lodged a complaint Ext.5 in Police Station
Chhauradano, alleging that about 100 to 150 persons came to
the Village Murli on the evening of 4th of August, 1990
armed with deadly weapons like Kharia, Pharsa, Garasa, guns,
rifles, sword, lathi etc. and caused the death of Jaimangal
Rai, Jatan Sah and Sheo Bachan and caused grievous hurt to
Amir Rai and also caused hurt to Ram Naresh Rai and Mauna
Devi. Based on the above complaint, the concerned police
registered a case under Section 147, 148, 149, 302, 307,
323, 324, 326, 307, 302, 380 IPC and Section 27 of the Arms
Act against the 35 accused persons named by the informant in
his complaint. After investigation a charge-sheet for the
above offences including an offence under Section 452 of the
IPC was laid and the accused so charge-sheeted were
committed for trial in the Court of Sessions. The
prosecution in support of its case has examined 17 witnesses
in all, they are PW-1 to PW-17. In the statement under
Section 313 of the Criminal Procedure Code, some of the
accused denied the allegation in total while some have
specifically stated that they were falsely implicated
because they had made certain allegations of black marketing
in sugar against some of the prosecution witnesses. We are
informed that out of the 21 appellants in the above appeals,
appellants Chhota Rai and Krishna Rai who have been shown at
serial Nos.11 and 15 respectively in Criminal Appeal
No.285/92 before the High Court have absconded from jail
while serving the sentence imposed on them. Therefore, we
deem it appropriate that their name be deleted from the
array of appellants and their appeal stands dismissed.
Consequently, the conviction and sentence passed against
them, stand confirmed. On behalf of the appellants, Mr.
Ashok Panda, learned senior counsel and Mr. Ranjan
Mukherjee, learned counsel have contended that the courts
below have not given a clear finding regarding the common
object of the assembly allegedly formed by these appellants.
In the absence of the same, they could not have been
convicted with the aid of Section 149 IPC. They have also
contended that the prosecution having failed to establish
any motive there could not have been a conviction against
these appellants. It was also their contention that the
eye-witnesses are inter-related, hence, are interested
witnesses so their evidence ought not to have been relied
upon. On behalf of the State, Mr. K B Sinha, learned
senior counsel has supported the judgments of the courts
below, countering the attack made by learned counsel for the
appellants on the judgments of the courts below. We have
carefully examined the evidence on record and considered the
arguments of both the sides. The prosecution case as placed
before the trial court shows that way-back on 6.8.1990
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Rajendra Rai son of Jaimangal Rai who is cited as PW-16
appeared before the Chhauradano Police Station and lodged a
complaint which was recorded by Sub-Inspector D N Thakur who
was examined as PW-17. In the said statement, he had stated
that on 5.8.1990 at about 7 p.m. when he was sitting along
with his father Jai Mangal Rai, one Jatan Sah of village
Pakaria had come to talk to his father and while they were
so talking, he saw suddenly a crowd of 100-150 persons
belonging to the Bihar Kisan Samiti heading towards them;
armed with Lathis, Bhala, Kharia, sword, Nalkatti gun and
rifles and out of them he identified as many as 33 of the
accused persons whom he named in his complaint. He also
narrated in the said complaint the individual weapons
carried by these accused persons. It was mentioned in the
said complaint that these accused persons were shouting
Maro Sale Ko and surrounded his house from all four sides.
Having seen the mob coming towards them, he, his father and
Jatan Sah went inside the house and closed its eastern door.
The complainant goes on to say that from amongst the accused
persons, Hira Rai, Daroga Rai, Mofil Rai, Sk. Motlif, Ali
Imam, Durbal Rai, Banka Rai, Bacha Rai, Wakil Rai and
Baijnath Rai with the help of some others broke open the
northern door of his house while some of the accused removed
the Tatti of the eastern door of the house and entered the
house. He states that he climbed atop the roof through a
ladder kept in the Angan while the accused persons got hold
of his father Jai Mangal Rai and Jatan Sah. According to
him, they dragged his father out to the northern side of the
house and the above named accused persons killed his father
by cutting with the weapons like Kharia and Farsa. In the
said process of killing, they also chopped his fathers
right leg above the ankle and also chopped the upper portion
of his neck. Thereafter, some of the accused persons got
hold of Jatan Sah and took him towards the roadside
assaulting him. In regard to the assault on Jatan Sah, the
complainant identified Dharamjeet, Lal Babu, Ambika,
Bindeshwar, Harihar Mahto and Sk. Shakeel, among others.
Those persons, it is stated, killed Jatan Sah by chopping
his body with weapons like Kharia and Farsa. He mentions
that his brother Mahendra Rai was also hiding with him on
the roof and both were able to witness the attack. The
complainant further says that after murdering his father and
Jatan Sah, all the accused persons went towards the house of
Sheo Bachan Rai son of Kuldeep Rai and broke open the door
of his house, dragged him out and murdered him by cutting
his head and neck. At that point of time, when Amir Rai son
of Kalyug Das came out of his house, the aforementioned
accused persons attacked him in the courtyard of his house
and inflicted injuries on his body. While Amir Rai was
being attacked, the assailants also attacked Muni Devi wife
of Sheo Bachan Rai. After the said assault, it is stated
that all the accused persons fled from the scene of
occurrence. The complainant has named, among others,
Jawahar Rai, Ram Babu Rai and Deep Lal Rai; all residents
of Murli village as having witnessed the incident. He also
stated that at the time of fleeing away, some of the accused
persons, who have been named in the complaint separately,
also took away two tin boxes containing one gold hasuli
valued at Rs.8,000/-, silver chandrahar valued at
Rs.1,600/-, Tika of gold valued at Rs.2,000/-, Payal of
Chandi valued at Rs.800/-, certain sarees and blouses and
cash of Rs.3,000/- and a motorcycle of Jatan Sah which was
parked near the front door of his house. The prosecution
through the evidence of PWs.6 and 7 - the doctors who
conducted the post mortem on the deceased Jai Mangal Rai,
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Jatan Sah and Sheo Bachan Rai has established that the
aforesaid deceased died a homicidal death due to the
injuries caused to them by sharp cutting weapons and other
hard blunt substances similar to the weapons carried by the
accused persons, as stated by the prosecution witnesses.
The doctors have opined that the death was the result of
haemorrhage caused by the injuries found on the person of
the said deceased. Through the evidence of PWs.5 and 6, the
prosecution has also established that PWs.4, 8, 12 and 17
had also suffered injuries attributable to the weapons
carried by the accused persons out of which PW-8 alone had
sustained 17 injuries on his person which were caused by
sharp edged weapons and hard blunt substances and one of its
injuries was so severe as to cause complete damage and loss
of his right forearm. The prosecution through the evidence
of the investigating officer, PW-17, has established that
the incident in question had occurred at the place as
mentioned in the complaint. From the evidence of the
eye-witnesses out of which many are either injured witnesses
or the relatives of the deceased persons whose presence at
the time of the incident cannot be doubted, it is clear that
the incident under reference has occurred as presented by
the prosecution case. Their evidence is quite consistent
and has withstood the test of cross-examination. It cannot
be doubted that these witnesses had identified the convicted
accused persons, hence, the courts below were justified in
placing reliance on their evidence to come to the conclusion
that the accused appellants were the members of an unlawful
assembly, the common object of which was to cause the death
of the aforesaid deceased and cause injuries to others. In
the process of achieving the said object, they had also
looted the property belonging to the witnesses. Since the
incident in question has taken place for a considerable long
time at different places near about the house of PW-1, the
witnesses were in a position to see and identify the accused
and their participation in the crime. Hence, on a careful
reading of the reasoning of the courts below and our
considering the evidence on record, we are of the opinion
that the findings of guilt recorded by the courts below are
consistent with the evidence adduced in the case and do not
call for any interference. Consequently, the appeals filed
by the accused-appellants are dismissed. This brings us to
the next question as regard to the enhancement of sentence
with regard to the three named accused in the order of this
Court dated 23.10.1996 wherein while granting leave to
appeal, this Court suo motu issued Rule to show cause why
the sentence of life imprisonment awarded by the High Court
on Bacha Rai, Banka Rai and Durbal Rai be not enhanced to
death sentence. These three appellants along with another
appellant named Hira Rai were awarded the maximum penalty of
death by the trial court while sentencing them for offences
punishable under Section 302 IPC. The trial court while
considering the awarding of sentence with reference to the
four accused persons sentenced to death held thus :-
Such barbarous gruesome activity of attack and murder
in mass way by unruly militant groups in villages and other
regions of this state is getting encouragement because in
such crime the criminals are not brought to book because the
witnesses being terrified of same consequences at the hands
of such criminals is they stand as eye witnesses in the
court of law against them. In the present set up of society
where people are constitutionally given full liberty of
physical and mental acts an expression for all round
progress of all individuals in right direction but the
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perverted assumption of this liberty is being applied in,
indulging in criminal activity in the nature one found in
the present and such activity is getting momentum. If such
perverted approach of life against the society is allowed to
flourish in the mind of people that be endangering the very
core of constitutional frame of the society we are living
in, and create havoc in mind of all leading to chaos. Such
nature of crime must be checked and in the present society
where moral-ethical sense is on diminishing trends that can
be checked by awarding exemplary punishment in rigorous form
of capital sentence to remind such criminals in the society
that human life is very precious and one who dares to take
life of others, has to lose his own life also by the court
of law. The principle laid down by the Honble Supreme
Court that the capital sentence to an accused in murder case
be awarded in the rarest of rare cases and in my mind for
the criminal behaviour of accused persons in nature of
present case must be brought under said dictum of law of
Honble Apex Court and accordingly four of the dreaded
criminals viz. accused, Banka Rai, Durbal Rai, Bacha Rai
and Hira Rai son of Jodha Rai deserve to capital penalty and
they are sentenced to death u/s 302 I.P.C. and it is
directed that each one of them be hanged by neck till he is
dead. However, this capital sentence will not come in
operation until the same is confirmed by the Honble High
Court Patna. x x x
The High Court while rejecting the reference under
Section 366 of the Code, did not discuss in detail why it
came to the conclusion, the death sentence awarded by the
trial court be not confirmed. It merely stated that the
interest of justice would be fully served if the sentence of
death is reduced to imprisonment for life. While we have
noted that the trial court has given some reasons for
awarding the death penalty on four of the accused, we think
it would have been more appropriate for the High Court to
have given reasons for differing from the view taken by the
trial court rather than mechanically rejecting the
reference. May be, it is for this reason that this Court
felt it imperative to issue notice of enhancement. We have
heard the learned counsel for the State as well as the four
appellants concerned and carefully considered the material
on record. It is a well settled law that while upholding a
conviction for the offence of murder, the penalty of death
is to be awarded only in rarest of the rare cases when the
court comes to the conclusion that the lesser sentence of
imprisonment for life would not meet the ends of justice.
This Court in the case of Gentela Vijayavardhan Rao & Anr.
v. State of A.P. (1996 6 SCC 241) after considering the
law laid down by the earlier judgments of this Court, has
held that no litmus is provided nor any test formulated to
discern precisely what is the rarest of the rare cases in
which the alternative option of awarding life sentence is,
thus, foreclosed. In Machhi Singh v. State of Punjab (1983
3 SCC 470) this court held that in order to award death
sentence the court should ask itself and answer the
following questions : (i) Was there something uncommon
about the crime which renders sentence of imprisonment for
life inadequate and calls for a death sentence ? (ii) Were
the circumstances of the crime such that there is no
alternative but to impose death sentence even after
according maximum weightage to the mitigating circumstances
which speak in favour of the offender ? Bearing in mind the
above principles, we find that the trial court has not
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applied its mind to the above principles and has proceeded
more on philosophic than on realistic grounds. The reasons
given by the trial court, which we have extracted
hereinabove for awarding death sentence, in our opinion, do
not conform to the guidelines laid in the above judgments of
this Court. The acts attributed by the prosecution to these
three appellants, who are the recipients of the notice for
enhancement, cannot be said to be any different from the
rest of the accused persons. Murder, as it is, is though
liable for the sentence befitting the crime, we do not think
the present case could be brought under the maxim rarest of
the rare cases so as to award the extreme penalty of death
on these appellants.
For these reasons, we are of the opinion that the
sentence of life imprisonment imposed by the High Court on
these three appellants was appropriate in the facts and
circumstances of this case, hence, we discharge the notice
of enhancement of sentence issued against Bacha Rai, Banka
Rai and Durbal Rai. However, their conviction and sentence
awarded by the High Court are confirmed, and all the appeals
stand dismissed.