Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MAHENDRA PRATAP SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SARJU SINGH & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
20/11/1967
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
CITATION:
1968 AIR 707 1968 SCR (2) 287
CITATOR INFO :
R 1973 SC1274 (17)
RF 1973 SC2145 (4,8)
R 1975 SC 580 (4)
ACT:
Code of Criminal Procedure (Act 5 of 1898), s. 439--Sessions
Court acquits-Revision--Power of High Court.
HEADNOTE:
In a revision filed by a private party, the High Court
in its powers under s. 439, Code of Criminal Procedure
directed the retrial of the appellant, who had been
acquitted by the Sessions Judge. In doing so. the High
Court, went into the evidence very minutely, questioned
every finding of the Sessions Judge, gave its own
interpretation of the evidence de novo.
HELD: In setting aside an acquittal in a revision and
ordering a retrial, there must exist a manifest illegality
in the judgment of acquittal or a gross miscarriage of
justice. An interference in revision with an order of
acquittal can only take place, if there is a glaring defect
of procedure such as that the Court has no jurisdiction to
court had shut out some material evidence which was
admissible or attempt to take into account evidence which
was not admissible or had overlooked some evidence.
Although the list given is not exhaustive of all the
circumstances in which the High Court may interfere with an
an, acuital in revision it is obvious that the defect in the
judgment under revision must be analogous to those actually
indicated by this Court. [290 A,D--E]
D. Stephens v. Nosibolla, [1951] S.C.R. 284, Logendranath
]ha and others v. Shri Polailal Biswas, [1951] S.C.R. 676
and K. Chinnaswamy Reddy v. State of Andhra Pradesh, [1963]
3 S.C.R. 412, followed.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 23 of
1965.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
July 17, 1964- of the Patna High Court in Criminal Revision
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No. 597 of 1963.
Nur-ud-din Ahmed and D. Goburdhan, for the appellant.
R.C. Prasad. for respondent No. 1.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Hidayatullah, J. This is an appeal against the
judgment. July 17, 1963. of a learned single Judge of the
High Court at Patna setting aside the acquittal of the
appellant ordered by the 1 st Additional Sessions Judge.
Gaya and directing his retrial.
The only question in this appeal is whether the High
Court in exercising its revisional powers under s. 439 of
the Code of Criminal Procedure acted in accordance with the
principles settled by this Court for interference with
acquittal by way of revision filed
288
by a private party. To apply those principles, certain
facts first be stated.
The appellant was tried on three charges levelled
against him First was under s. 302 of the Indian Penal Code
for intentionally causing the death of one Kuldip Singh with
a fire-arm on December 18, 1961 in village Gajra Chatar; the
second was attempt murder Kuldip Shigh’s companion Sarju
Singh by shooting at him with the same weapon; and the third
was the unlawful possession of the weapon (a revolver) which
is an offence under the Arms Act. It appears that there was
some iII-feeling between the appellant and Kuldip Singh,
not directly, but because the appellant, who is a lawyer,
was conducting cases on behalf of his sister in prolonged
litigation started by Kuldip Singh and his party.The
litigation concerned the possession of land and it is
admitted before us that all the cases had in fact ended in
favour of the appellant’s sister.
The occurrence is stated to have taken place when an
inquiry into a case under s. 107 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure was taking place. A notice had been issued to
Kuldip Singh’s party to show cause why they should not be
proceeded against and asked to furnish interim bail. The
prosecution story is that the deceased Kuldip Singh
accompanied by Sarju Singh the injured man, and one Musafir
Singh (P. W. 12) were proceeding towards village Nawadah
via Tilaiya Railway Station.’ They had started early in
the morning and had taken an hour and a half to reach
village Gajra Chatar where the incident is said to have
taken place. When they reached near a garden. they found two
persons sitting under a tree and approaching them they
recognised the appellant but the other was unknown. These
persons began to shadow Kuldip Singh and his companions, and
after they had proceeded a little further towards the
garden, one of them fired at Kuldip on his back. The
prosecution case is that Sarju immediately turned round
and attempted to catch hold of the appellant who had fired
with a revolver, but ’the appellant shot Sarju on his leg
behind the knee. Thereafter. the appellant and his companion
ran away.
The report of the incident was made by Kuldip Singh
himself who seems not to have lost his consciousness and in
that report he named the appellant. Subsequently, Kuldip
made two dying declarations in which he again named the
appellant as the assailant. describing the weapon of attack
as a revolver. Kuldip died and the case was started against
the appellant as stated already.
The, learned Sessions Judge on an appraisal of the
evidence found it unsatisfactory. He began by stating that
the medical evidence as also the evidence of ’the
ballistic expert (P.W. 17) clearly disclosed that the
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assault was not committed with a revol vet but with a shot
gun. He also could not believe the evidence.
289
that Sarju could be shot from behind when he was grappling
with the appellant. He felt that this created doubt as to
whether the injured persons and Musafir who all consistently
described the weapon as a revolver had in fact been able to
see the weapon or to identify the assailant. Having found
this unworthy of credit, the learned Sessions Judge went
into a number of other circumstances which in his opinion
tended to show that the prosecution case was not free from
concoction and hence not free from doubt. He felt that the
attack was from an ambush and the deceased and 1he witnesses
had named the appellant with whom they had deep enmity but
they had not seen the real assailant. He accordingly gave
the benefit of doubt to the appellant and ordered his
acquittal.
In revision, the learned Judge in ’the High Court went
into the evidence very minutely. He questioned every single
finding of the learned Sessions Judge and gave his own
interpretation of the evidence and the inferences to be
drawn from it. He discounted the theory that the weapon of
attack was a revolver and suggested that it might have been
a shot gun or country made pistol which the villagers in the
position of Kuldip and Sarju could not distinguish from a
revolver.He then took up each single circumstance on which
the learned Sessions Judge had found some doubt and
interpreting the evidence de novo held, contrary to the
opinion of the Sessions Judge that they were acceptable:
All the time he appeared to give the benefit of the doubt to
the prosecution. The only error of law which the learned
Judge found in the Sessions Judge’s judgment was a remark by
the Sessions Judge that the defence witnesses who were
examined by the police before they were brought as defence
witnesses ought to have been cross examined with reference
to their previous statements recorded by the police, which
obviously is against the provisions of the’ Code.Except
for this error, no defect of procedure or of law was
discovered by the learned Judge of the High Court in his
appraisal of the judgment of the Sessions Judge. As stated
already by us,he seems to have gone into the matter as if an
appeal against acquittal was before him making no
distinction between the appellate and the revisional powers
exercisable by the High Court in matters of acquittal except
to the extent that instead of convicting the appellant he
only ordered his retrial. In our opinion the learned
Judge was clearly in error in proceeding as he did in a
revision filed by a private party. against the acquittal
reached in 1he Court of Session.
The practice on the subject has been stated by this
Court on more than one occasion. In D. Stephens v.
Nosibolla(1), only two grounds are mentioned by this Court
as entitling the High Court set aside an acquittal in a
revision and to order a retrial. They
[1915] S.C.R. 284.
290
are that there must exist a manifest illegality in the
judgment of the Court of Session ordering the acquittal or
there must be a gross miscarriage of justice. In explaining
these two propositions, this Court further states that the
High Court is not entitled to interfere even if a wrong view
of law is taken by the Court of Session or if even there is
misapprehensions of evidence. Again, in Logendranath Jha
and others v. Shri Polailal Biswas(1), this Court points out
that the High Court is entitled in revision to set aside an
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acquittal if there is an error on a point of law or no
appraisal of the evidence at all. This Court observes that
it is not sufficient to say that the judgment under revision
is "perverse" or "lacking in true correct perspective". It
is pointed out further that by ordering a retrial, the dice
is loaded against the accused, because however much the High
Court may caution the Subordinate Court, it is always
difficult to reweigh the evidence ignoring the opinion of
the High Court. Again in K. Chinnaswamy Reddy v. State of
Andhra Pradesh(2), it is pointed out that an interference in
revision with an order of acquittal can only take place if
there is a glaring defect of procedure such as that the
Court had no jurisdiction to try the case or the Court had
shut out some material evidence which was admissible or
attempted to take into account evidence which was not
admissible or had overlooked some evidence. Although the
list given by this Court is not exhaustive of all the
circumstances in which the High Court may interfere with an
acquittal in revision it is obvious that the defect in the
judgment under revision must be analogous to those actually
indicated by this Court. As stated’,’ not one of these
points which have been laid down by this Court was covered
in the present case. In fact on reading the judgment of the
High Court it is apparent to us that the learned Judge has
reweighed the evidence from his own point of view and
reached inferences contrary to those of the Sessions Judge
on almost every point. This we do not conceive to be his
duty in dealing in revision with an acquittal when
Government has not chosen to file an appeal against it.
In other words, the learned Judge in the High Court has not
attended to the rules laid down by this Court and has acted
in breach of them.
We have had the two judgments read out to us and we are
of opinion that there is much that can be said in favour of
the judgment of the Sessions Judge who probably felt that
the identity of the real assailant not having been found,
the persons chose to name the most likely persons or one who
was responsible for their discomfiture in the litigation
which was going on for years. That the appellant might have
hired some assassins or might even have himself been present
at the occurrence may be true but the question
(1) [1951] S.C.R. 676. (2) [1963] 3 S.C.R. 412.
291
was whether the Sessions Judge was not within his rights in
rejecting the prosecution case on a proper appraisal of the
evidence which he found to be unsatisfactory. Looking to
all the circumstances that have been brought to our notice,
we are satisfied that the Sessions Judge acted within his
rights in deciding the case which to us appears also to be
somewhat doubtful in many respects and the High Court was
therefore in error in taking upon itself the l duty of
hearing a revision application as if it was an appeal and
setting aside the acquittal not by convicting the accused
but reaching the same result indirectly by ordering a
retrial. In our opinion, the judgment of the High Court
cannot be allowed to stand.
The appeal succeeds and the order of retrial is
therefore revoked and the acquittal is restored.
Y.P. Appeal allowed.