Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
GOVINDASAMI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF TAMIL NADU
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 22/04/1998
BENCH:
M.K. MUKHERJEE, SYED SHAH MOHAMMED QUADRI
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
M.K. Mukherjee, j.
This appeal under Section 379 Cr. P.C. is directed
against the judgment and order dated September 2,1997
rendered by the Madras High Court in Criminal Appeal No. 30
of 1998. By the impugned judgment the High Court reserved
the acquittal of the appellant of five charges of murder,
convicted him thereof and sentenced him to death. The
victims were Nagamalai (elder brother of the appellant’s
father), his wife, two sons and a daughter.
2. The prosecution case briefly stated is as follows: -
(I) On May 30, 1984 at or about 7.00 A.M. Sowndaram (P.W.2),
a resident of village Kondayapalayam, in which Nagamalai and
appellant also lived, went to the house of the former to
fetch milk as it was her daily wont. Reaching there she
found him, his wife, two sons and a daughter lying dead in
the front yard of their house with bleeding injuries on
their persons. She rushed back to her house and told her
husband Kurukkal ( P.W.3) about the macabre murders. P.W.3
then went to the house of Nagamalai and, having seen the
dead bodies, apprised his co-villager Ramaswamy (P.W.1) of
the incident. After a visit to the house of Nagamalai, P.W.1
went to the nearby village Varapalayam and gave a report to
Ramani Marimuthu (P.W.7), their Village Administrative
Officer, which was recorded by him. In that report he first
described what he had seen in the house of Nagamalai and
then stated that he suspected that Govindaswami (the
appellant) and his young brother had committed the murders
as there was a land dispute between them and Nagamalai.
(ii) P.W. 7 then left for village Kondayampalayam and
after seeing the dead bodies went to Puliampatti Police
Station and submitted the report (Ex.p.1). On that
report a case was registered and investigation taken up by
Palanisamy (P.W.236), the then Circle Inspector of Police.
He went to the house of Nagainalal held inquest upon the
five dead bodies and sent them to the Government hospital,
Sathyamangalam for post-mortem examination. He seized some
articles from the scene of crime, including a wrist watch
with its broken chain (M.O.1).
(iii) On June 4, 1984 the investigation of the case was
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taken over by Shri Beeman (P.W. 27), an Inspector of Police.
On that day he arrested the appellant and seized a blood
stained lungi (M.O. 19) and a promissory note (M.O. 20) from
his person under a memo (P.Ex. 8). Pursuant to a statement
made by the appellant he then went to the house of Marimuthu
(P.W. 14), an astrologer by profession, in village Arasur
and seized a cycle (M.O. 21) and gunny bag (M.O. 23)
containing a torch light (M.O. 18) and an aruval, (M.O. 22),
a heavy sharp. cutting instrument. The aruval, lungi and
some other articles seized from the scene of crime were sent
to the Forensic Science Laboratory (F.S.L.) for chemical
examination. After receipt of report of such examination and
on completion of investigation police submitted charge-sheet
against the appellant.
3. The appellant pleaded not guilty to the charges and
contended that he was falsely implicated.
4. That Nagamalai, his wife, two sons and a daughter met
with homicidal death in front of their house stands proved
by overwhelming evidence on record. Indeed, this part of the
prosecution case was not challenged by the defence. Apart
from the uncontroverted evidence of P.Ws. 1,2,3, and 7, all
of whom claimed to have seen the dead bodies of the 5
persons lying with bleeding injuries in front of their
house, the evidence of P.W.27, who held inquest upon the
dead bodies, proves that fact. From the evidence of the
three doctors, namely, Dr. Ulaganathan (P.W.16) , Dr. Saroja
(P.W. 17) and Dr. marimuthu (P.W. 18), who held post-mortem
examination upon one or the other of those dead bodies, we
get that each of them had a number of deep cut injuries all
over their bodies. While Nagamalai had 6 such injuries, his
sons, Moorthy and Balasubramanian, had 12 and 4
respectively, his wife Ponnathal had 4 daughter Anbu Selvi
had 2. When shown the aruval (M.O. 22), the doctors opined
that all the injuries could be caused by such a weapon. From
the evidence of the above witnesses it is thus abundantly
clear that the 5 deceased met with homicidal death in front
of the their house in the night between May 29 and May 30,
1984.
5. The pivotal question that now falls for our
determination is whether the prosecution has been able to
conclusively prove that the appellant is the perpetrator of
the above murders. In absence of any eye witness to prove
the same the prosecution relied upon the following
circumstances;- (i) the appellant had a motive to commit the
murders as he was having a boundary dispute with Nagamalal
over their properties and two days prior to the murders he
had a quarrel with nagamalai and his son Moorthy in course
of which he (the appellant) was beaten up. Besides,
Nagamalai coerced the appellant to sign a promissory note;
(ii) from the scene of crime a wrist watch with a broken
chain (M.O. 1) belonging to the appellant was recovered;
(iii) at the time of his arrest on June 4, 1984 the
appellant was found wearing a blood stained lungi (M.O. 19)
and having a promissory note (M.O. 20) with him; and
(iv) pursuant ‘o the statement made by the appellant aruval
(M.O. 22) was recovered from the house of P.W. 14 on June
4,1984 and it was found to be stained with human blood of
group ’B’, which was also the blood group of some of the
decease.
6. On consideration of the of the evidence adduced by the
prosecution to prove the above circumstances the trial Court
held that none of them stood proved an, accordingly, it
acquitted the appellant. In reversing the findings of the
trial Court, the High Court held that all the above
circumstances stood firmly established and that those
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circumstances unerringly pointed to the guilt of the
appellant.
7. Mr. Ranjan Mukherjee, the learned counsel appearing for
the appellant, first submitted that the reasons given by the
trial Court for rejecting the relevant and material evidence
of the evidence of the prosecution were weightier and had
not been completely displaced by the High Court. He next
submit that, in any case, the view of the evidence taken by
the trial Court was also a reasonable one. In such a
situation, he argued, the High Court should not have
reversed the order of acquittal, by ignoring the well-
settled principles laid down by this Court in this regard.
he lastly submitted that even if it was assumed that the
High Court was justified in so doing, it was not justified
in imposing the sentence of death.
8. As against this Mr. Pragasam, learned counsel for the
State, submitted that the reasons given by the trial Court
for discarding the entire prosecution evidence were patently
untenable and had been rightly dispelled by the High Court.
According to him the powers of the High Court to review the
evidence and reach its own findings in an appeal against
acquittal are as wide as those of the trial Courts.
9. This being a statutory appeal we have gone through the
entire evidence on record keeping in view the judgments of
the Courts below. Our such exercise persuades us to hold
that each of the findings of the trial Courts is patently
wrong.
10. Coming first to the motive, the prosecution examined
five witnesses to prove the same; and they are Ramaswamy
(P.W.1), Donnuswamy (P.W.4). Govindaswamy (P.W. 5),
Ramaswamy (P.W. 6) and Ganesan (P.W. 8), the surviving son
of the deceased Nagamalai, who at the material time was in
Coimbatore. P.W.1, who is related to both the deceased and
the appellant, testified that there were disputes between
them with regard to the boundaries of their land and that he
and other Panchayatdars attempted to settle the disputes.
P.W.4 stated that about 1-1/2 year before the incident the
mother of the appellant complained to him about the boundary
dispute and grazing of cattle and that he and others
mediated and settled the dispute before the date of
occurrence. Similar is the evidence of P.W.5. The evidence
of P.W.8 in this regard is that due to land dispute there
were frequent quarrels between his father and the appellant.
In disbelieving the evidence adduced by the prosecution to
prove the motive the trial Court observed that there were
discrepancies in the evidence of the above witnesses as to
when the Panchayat was convened and who were the
participants. Having carefully gone through the evidence we
do not find any material contradiction to discredit them. On
the contrary, we find the their evidence unmistakably proves
that there were disputes between them regarding the
boundaries of their lands and the most eloquent proof in
support thereof (which has gone completely unnoticed by the
trial Court as also by the High Court) is the evidence of
Ramaswamy (P.W. 6) of village Ponnampalayan. From his
evidence we get that two days prior to the occurrence he had
seen nagamalai and his son Moorthy quarrelling with the
appellant in connection with their lands. he further stated
that the appellant came to him and complained that Nagamalai
got an empty promissory note signed by him and beat him up.
He next stated that he advised them not to quarrel. This
witness was not at all cross-examined with reference to the
above aspects of his evidence. When the above unconverted
evidence of P.W.6 is read along with the evidence of the
witnesses mentioned earlier there cannot be any manner of
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doubt that the prosecution has succeeded in proving that
there was dispute between the appellant and Nagamalai their
lands and that only two days before the incident they had a
quarrel over that dispute in course of which the former beat
the appellant and, thereafter compelled him to sign a
promissory note.
11. To prove the second circumstance, the prosecution
firstly relied upon the evidence of P.W. 26 and P.W.7,
P.W.26 testified that in presence of Mariamuthu (P.W. 7).
The Village Administrative Officer, and K. Anumugam he
seized a HMT wrist watch with the word ’Cheran’ engraved
thereon (M.O.1), which was found near the dead body of
Moorthy under a memo (Ext. P.6) The above testimony of P.W.
26 stands corroborated by that of P.W. 7 and the seizure
memo, contemporaneously prepared. The evidence adduced by
the prosecution to prove the above recovery was not
challenged by the defence. Next, to prove that the seized
wrist watch belonged to the appellant, the prosecution
examined Sabesan (P.W 11) , Who is a resident of the same
village and at the material time was working as a bus-
conductor in Jeeva Transport Corporation. He testified that
his uncle gave him a HMT wrist watch with the word ’Cheran’
written thereon, which he (his uncle) had purchased from a
worker of Cheran Transport Corporation. After he (P.W. 11)
had used the wrist watch for 2/3 years he sold it to the
appellant, whom he knew from before, for Rs. 240/- about two
years before the incident. He identified M.O. 1 as the wrist
watch which he sold to him. P.W. 11 was cross-examined at
length but nothing could be elicited to discredit him.
Rather, it was elicited that 10/15 days prior to the
incident he had seen the appellant wearing the same.
12. The trial Court disbelieved the evidence of P.W. 11
principally on the ground that he did not furnish any
receipt regarding purchase of the wrist watch by his uncle
or sale to the appellant nor could he give the number of the
wrist watch. According to the trial Court, since any person
could have owned that wrist watch and could be present at
the scene of crime, recovery of the same did not and could
not incriminate the appellant. The above reasons are, to say
the least, untenable. it is a matter of common knowledge
that a person has any uncanny sense of identifying his own
belongings, particularly articles of regular personal use.
The trial Court was, therefore, not at all justified in
discarding the assertion of P.W. 11, who admittedly bore no
animus against the appellant, that the wrist watch (M.O. 1)
earlier belonged to him . While on this point it is
pertinent to mention that the word ’Cheran’ engraved in M.O.
1 unmistakably supported P.W. 11’S version. Equally
unjustified was the trial Court in disbelieving his further
assertion that he sold the wrist watch to the appellant for
absence of receipt relating to the sale or purchase of the
same for it is also common knowledge that in such petty
transactions in villages no body insists thereupon. It must,
therefore, be said that the prosecution has been able to
firmly establish that the wrist watch found at the place of
occurrence belonged to the appellant.
13. That brings us to the third circumstance. P.W. 27, the
Inspector of Police, who took up the investigation of the
case on June 4, 1984 from P.W. 26, testified that on that
day he arrested the appellant at pullyampatty bus stop and
seized a blood stained lungi (M.O. 19) and a promissory
note (M.O. 20) in presence of witnesses one of whom was
Murugesan (P.W. 9), and the seizure memo (Ext. p-8) fully
corroborate the evidence of P.W. 27 in this respect and the
report of the Chemical Examiner show that the lungi
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contained human blood. It is of course true that the
Serologist could not give any definite opinion as to its
blood group due to disintegration but absence thereof does
not in any way affect the prosecution case. In discarding
the evidence regarding recovery of the hand note the trial
court observed that the hand-writing expert could not give
any definite opinion that the signature appearing thereon
was that of the appellant but it failed to consider that
when the factum of the above recovery is read along with the
admission made by the appellant before P.W. 1 of his having
been coerced by Nagamalai to execute a hand note in his
favour the recovery of the hand note is a strong
incriminating circumstance against him.
14. Having found that the first there circumstances stand
firmly established we turn our attention to the last
circumstance. As earlier noticed, the appellant was
apprehended by P.W. 27 on June 4, 1984 in presence of P.W.9
and one Arumugam. According to P.W. 27, after his arrest the
appellant made a statement which he recorded in presence of
the above witnesses. The statement (Ext.p-7), to the extent
it is admissible under Section 27 of the Evidence Act, was
to the effect that if permitted he would identify and hand
over the cycle, torch light, gunny bag and aruval. After
making the statement, the appellant led them to the house of
P.W.14 in village Arasur. Reaching there he brought out,
from the house of P.W. 14 a cycle (M.O. 21), a gunny bag
(M.O.23), a torch light (M.O. 18) and an aruval (M.O.22) .
In presence of the witnesses, namely, P.W. 9 and Arumugam
P.W. 27 seized those articles under a memo which was
attested by both of them. P.W. 27 further stated that he
sent the seized articles, including the aruval for chemicals
analysis.
15. While supporting the testimony of P.W. 27, P.W. 9, who
is an independent witness, stated that in his presence and
that of Arumugam the Inspector (P.W. 27) interrogated the
appellant. In course of the interrogation the appellant
stated that he would identify and hand over the aruval and
cycle if taken to Arasur and the statement 80 made was
recorded by P.W. 27 (Ext. P.7) and attested by him and
Arumugam. He next stated that after the blood stained lungi
and promissory note were seized (about which we have
discussed earlier) he along with P.W. 27, the appellant and
Arumugam proceeded to Arasur where the appellant identified
the house of astrologer Marimuthu (P.W.14). From that house
he took out a cycle with a gunny bag tied in the carrier of
the cycle. In that gunny bag one aruval and one torch light
were found. In cross-examination he stated that the aruval
was found to be blood stained. He denied the defence
suggestion that he was deposing falsely at the instance of
the police.
16. In his evidence P.W. 14 stated that on May 31, 1984 at
or about 7 A.M. the appellant came to his house on a cycle
and sought his professional advice for which he gave him Rs.
2/-. The appellant then left his house leaving behind his
cycle and the gunny bag stating that he would take them back
in the evening. When he asked about the contents of the
gunny bag he told him that there were some coirs in it. The
appellant, however did not return as promised, but after
four days he came to his house accompanied by the police.
After entering his house the appellant took out the cycle
and the gunny bag and brought out one aruval and a torch
light therefrom. This witness was cross-examined at length
but nothing could be elicited to discredit him. This witness
hails from a different village altogether and there is
nothing to suggest even as to why he would depose falsely
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against the appellant why he did not know from before. The
trial Court disbelieved the evidence of P.W. 14 on the
grounds that it was not expected of him to remember each of
the 20-40 persons who used to come daily to seek his advice
and that, admittedly, he did not keep any account of his
professional activities. In our considered view both the
grounds are wholly unsustainable; the former is factually
incorrect, in that he (P.W. 14) stated that on an average 5-
10 persons came daily to seek his advice and so far as the
second one is concerned, it was not expected of P.W. 14 who
was earning his livelihood in a village as an astrologer
charging Rs. 2/- per person, to keep accounts of his income.
Having carefully gone through the evidence of P.Ws. 27,8 and
14 we have no hesitation in concluding that the prosecution
has been able to conclusively prove that pursuant to the
statement of the appellant that he would hand over the
aruval, it was recovered from the house of P.W.14. The
reports of the Chemical Examiner show that the seized aruval
contained human blood of group ‘B’ and the blood seized from
the spot where the dead bodies were lying was also of group
‘B’. The fourth circumstance, thus, also stands cogently
established.
17. When the above four circumstances, each of which
unerringly points towards the guilt of the appellant, are
taken cumulatively, there is no escape from the conclusion
that they are consistent only with the hypothesis of the
guilt of the appellant and wholly inconsistent with his
innocence. We, therefore, uphold the conviction of the
appellant as recorded by the High Court.
18. Lastly, comes the question of sentence. Mr. Mukherjee
submitted that the present case did not fall in the category
of ’rarest of rare cases’ justifying imposing the extreme
penalty of death. According to him, the mere fact that the
appellant committed five murders cannot be made a ground for
imposition of death sentence. In making the above submission
he strongly relied upon the judgment of this Court in
Shamshul Kanwar v. State of U.P. (AIR 1995 S.C. 1748],
wherein it was observed that a large number of deaths on one
side cannot ipso facto be a ground to bring the case into
the category of rarest of rare cases’. He also relied upon
some other judgments of this Court wherein sentences of
death were commuted. To avoid prolixity we refrain from
referring to those cases as they turned on their own facts.
In responding to the above contention of Mr. Mukherjee, Mr.
Pragasam relied upon the observations recorded by the High
Court while imposing the death sentence.
19. From the impugned judgment we find that the High Court
first discussed the principles laid down by this Court, for
imposing death sentence in bachan Singh v. State of Punjab
(AIR 1980 S.C. 898], and other cases and then stated as
under:-
" Now, we are going to consider the
law laid down by the Apex Court of
our land in the above rulings with
reference to the present case on
hand. Admittedly, as seen from the
facts and circumstances of the
case, the following are proved
beyond doubt:
1) There is no provocation or any
quarrel between the accused and the
five deceased. All the five
deceased were unarmed and sleeping
during midnight and also they were
helpless. There was no scope or
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chance for them to face the attack
.
2) It is proved beyond doubt that
it was a pre-meditated one, but not
on account of any sudden
provocation.
3) There is no mental derangement
for the accused to kill 5 human
beings in five strokes one after
another and they were killed during
the course of their sleep.
4) The nature and the manner in
which the accused committed the
five murders found to be gruesome,
calculated, heinous, atrocious and
cold-blooded murder.
Accordingly, in the above
circumstances, it is proved beyond
doubt that the said heinous and
calculated offence committed by the
respondent/accused in killings the
5 persons with five strokes one
after the another is a rarest of
the rare cases of the present age
in this State as a whole.
We are of the clear view that the
way in which he cut the neck of
five individuals, while they were
sleeping during mid-night, is
really a pre-meditated, atrocious
and calculated murder. As such we
are of the clear opinion that if a
human being of this nature viz.,
the respondent /accused is allowed
to continue to live in the present
society, there is great threat to
the co-human beings. There is not
safety or protection for the
innocent, helpless, un-armed follow
human beings in the above special
reason and the peculiar
circumstances of the case on hand,
we are of the clear view that it is
just, proper, appropriate, fit and
deserving case where the capital
punishment of death could be
awarded to the respondent/accused."
20. From the above quoted observations, it is seen that the
High Court did not base its decision to impose the penalty
of death solely on the fact that 5 person were murdered but
also other attendant circumstances relating to the murders.
Having given our anxious and deep consideration to this
aspect of the matter we are in complete agreement with the
reasons canvassed by the High Court to impose the capital
punishment. We only wish to add that the brutal manner in
which the appellant wiped out the entire family of his uncle
[except one of his sons, (P.W.8) who, fortunately at the
material time was studying in Coimbatore, obviously to grab
his properties, has shocked our judicial conscience.
Nonetheless we looked in to the record to find out whether
there was any extenuating or mitigating circumstances in
favour of the appellant but found none. If, inspite thereof,
we commute the death sentence to life imprisonment we will
be yielding to spasmodic sentiment, unregulated benevolence
and misplaced sympathy.
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21. In Mahesh v. State of Madhya Pradesh [(1987) 3 S.C.C.
80], this Court, while refusing to commute the death
sentence, observed:-
" It will be mockery of justice to
permit the accused to escape the
extreme penalty of law when faced
with such evidence and such cruel
acts. To give the lesser punishment
for the accused would be to render
the justicing system of this Courts
suspect . The common man will lose
faith in courts. In such cases, he
understands and appreciates the
deterrence more than the
reformative jargon."
As the above observations squarely apply in facts of
the instant case we uphold the sentence of death imposed
upon the appellant.
22. In the result, the appeal falls and the same is hereby
dismissed.