Sohrab S/O Belinayata & ANR Vs.
The State of Madhya Pradesh [1972] INSC 132 (2 May 1972)
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
MITTER, G.K.
CITATION: 1972 AIR 2020 1973 SCR (1) 472 1972
SCC (3) 751
CITATOR INFO :
F 1973 SC2443 (19) RF 1988 SC 696 (13)
ACT:
Practice and Procedure-Power of High Court in
appeal against acquittal.
HEADNOTE:
In an appeal against acquittal, the High
Court, while maintaining the acquittal of some of the accused, ;reversed it in
respect of the appellants and convicted them of offences under s, 302 read with
s. 34, I.P.C.
Dismissing the appeal to this Court,
HELD : Under ss. 417, 418 and 423, Cr.P.C.,
the High Court has full power to, review at large the evidence upon which an
order of .acquittal was founded and to reach the conclusion that upon the
evidence the order of acquittal should be reversed. But in exercising this
power the High Court should give proper weight and consideration 'to such
matters as, (a) The views of the trial judge as to the credibility of the
witnesses; (b) the presumption of innocence in favour of the accused, a
presumption certainly not weakened by the fact that he has been acquitted at
the trial; (c) the right of the accused to the benefit of any doubt, and (d)
the slowness of the appellate court to disturb a finding of fact arrived at by
a judge who had the advantage of seeing the witnesses. It should not only
consider every matter on record having a bearing on the questions of fact and
the reasons given by the Court below in support of its order of acquittal, but
should express its reasons in its judgment which led it to hold that the
acquittal was not justified. [478 E-H; 479 A-C] In the present case, the High
Court did consider all the aspects considered by the Sessions Court, with most
of which it has also concurred especially those aspects of the case in respect
of which witnesses tried to embellish and exaggerate. But that by itself, does
not assist the accused nor can the broad features of the evidence of the
prosecution case be doubted in respect of its version.
Merely because there have been discrepancies
and contradictions in the evidence of some or all of the witnesses it did not
mean that the entire evidence of the prosecution had to be discarded., It was
only after exercising caution and care and sifting the evidence to separate the
truth from untruth, exaggeration, embellishment and improvement, that the High
Court had come to the conclusion that what could be accepted implicated the
appellants and convicted them. This Court has held that falsus in uno falsus in
omnibus'. is not a sound rule for the reason that hardly any one comes across
witness whose evidence does not contain a grain of untruth or at any Ira some
exaggeration or embellishment.. Where, however, the substratum of the prosecution
case, or a material part of the evidence, could not be belived, it would not be
permissible for the Court to reconstruct a story of its own out of the rest.
[477 G-H; 478 A-D] Sheo Swarup and Ors. v. King Emperor, A.I.R. 1934 P.C. 227;
Sarwant Singh v. State of Rajasthan, [1961] 3
C.C.R. 120 and Agarwal v. State of Maharashtra, [1963] 2 S.C.R. 405, referred
to.
473
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal
Appeal No. 240 of 1969.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and
order dated August 5, 1969 of the Madhya Pradesh High Court, Indore Bench in
Criminal Appeal No. 26 of 1967.
Frank Anthony, P. C. Chandi, A. T. M. Sampat,
E. C. Agarwala and K. C. Agarwala, for the appellants.
I. N. Shroff, for the respondent.
The Judgment of, the Court was delivered by
P. Jaganmohan Reddy, J. The Sessions Judge of Indore acquitted all the seven
accused who were charged with the murder of one Sobal Singh. In an appeal by
the State, the High Court while maintaining the acquittal of five of them viz.
Jinnatbai, Gaburia, Ismail, Sardar and Bashir;
reversed it in respect of Sohrab and Nadar,
whom he convicted under Section 302/34 and sentenced each of them to life
imprisonment. They were also convicted under Section 25-A of the Arms Act and
each of them was sentenced to one_year's rigorous imprisonment. The sentences
were directed to run concurrently. This appeal is by certificate against the
said convictions and sentences.
The prosecution case is that there was a
strained relationship between the accused and the deceased inasmuch as in
December, 1963, one Kudrat, the husband of Jinnatbai, was murdered and for that
murder, Sobal Singh, the deceased, was prosecuted along with another person,
but they were acquitted. It is alleged that on the morning of 26th February, 1966
all the seven accused started from the house of Sohrab. Jinnatbai with her
little son and Nadar went in a chhakda driven by Gaburia. Ismail, Bashir and
Sardar were on bicycles and Sohrab was riding a mare and was carrying
unlicensed-revolver with him. At the time when they left, it also appears that
Jinnatbai handed to Nadar an unlicensed gun which he kept in the Chhakda. It is
further alleged that shortly before the departure of the accused persons, Sobal
singh left Solsindhi for Sanwer on foot accompanied by one Chhogia and were
closely followed by Madhosingh, Kishandas, Kana and Bhawarsingh in a Chhakda.
Near the village Maharajganj, the, accused persons were alleged to have
overtaken the two groups of persons and went further ahead. Then Sohrab turned his
mare round and began to chase Sobalsingh across the fields which lie within the
boundaries of mouza Ranwer. Chofia however ran away. It is the prosecution case
that in the course of the chase Sohrab fired at Sobals ingh several times with
his revolver and at one point caught him by the shirt which came off. Sohrab
threw away that shirt and continued to chase the deceased a little farther
after which he dismounted the mare. Just then Nadar came 474 running with a
double-barrelled shot-gun, which he handed to Sohrab and caught hold of
Sobalsingh. Sohrab is then alleged to have fired the gun at Sobalsingh as a
result of which both Sobalsingh and Nadar fell down. Nadar, however, got up and
thereafter Sohrab again fired at Sobalsingh who was lying on the ground, face
up. Just at that time Bashir and Sardar came running to the spot and struck
Sobalsingh with knives. It is said that as a result of the cumulative effect of
firing by Sohrab and stabbing by Bashir and Sardar, Sobalsingh died on the
spot, after which Sohrab, Nadar, Bashir and Sardar went upto the Chhakda, and
on Jinnatbai asking whether the man was dead or alive, she was told that he had
been finished and Kudarat avenged.
Within an hour of the incident, the
deceased's father, Madhosingh, who himself claims to be an eye witness, made a
report at the police station, Sanwar, which is only a mile and a half from the
scene of the occurrence. After recording the information an F.I.R. was issued.
The police reached the spot where the body of Sobalsingh was lying and from
that place and thefields in the vicinity, seized several articles including
used and unused ammunition of shotgun and revolver, a shirtand a stirrup with a
piece of its strap which was detached from 'the saddle The prosecution case was
that after the accused persons were arrested as a result of' the statement made
byBashir two knives were recovered from the trunk of a date palm tree near the
border of villages Bhaori and Deorakhedi; Sohrab is said to have pointed out a,
place also on the border of those villages, as the place where he is alleged to
have broken up the revolver and the, gun and cut up and burnt the wooden
components of the gun. As a consequence of this statement,. several articles
connected with the firearm Were recovered. , It was also the case of the
prosecution that divers were employed to. explore the bottom of the river
Kshipra near that place from where the other parts of the gun were recovered
and a number of disjointed and. mutilated firearm parts, some used and unused
cartridges were recovered. A saddle from which one of the stirrups with a part
of the strap was missing was recovered from the house of one, Darvesh, the
maternal uncle of accused Sohrab. The strap which is alleged to have been found
near the scene of the occcurrence according to the prosecution case,, matched
with the stirrup and strap found on that saddle. The payjama of the deceased
and the two knives, said to have been recovered at the instance of accused
Bashir, were sent to the Chemical Examiner and Serologist and according to his
report only on one of the knives blood was found, but it could not be confirmed
as human blood Autopsy,on Sobal singh's body showed that he had died of'
internal haemorrhage and shock resulting, from gunshot wounds and injuries to
vital parts like liverspleen and lungsAccused Nadar was twice operated an andfive
bullets were extracted, throe 475 from the left hand and two from the right.
These pellets were identified to be gun shots. The ballistic experts who I also
examined several articles, said to have been recovered at the instance of the
accused Sohrab were sought to be pieced. The shirt which was recovered from the
scene of the, incident which had a hole, was examined by the expert who was of
the opinion that that hole could only be caused by o.38 revolver. The shots
recovered from the body of the deceased were found to be gun shots and not
revolver bullets. All the accused denied that guilt and in so far as the
appellants are concerned with whose case alone we are concerned in their
statement under Section 342, they do not say that no such incident took place
but that the death of Sobalsingh was not caused by them. We shall examine their
statement in the, context of the prosecution case as spoken to by the eye witnesses.
The Sessions Judge found serious infirmities
in the prosecution evidence. The story that Sobalsingh was chased by Sohrab
while riding a horse or that Sohrab had fired pistol shots and had pulled out
Sobalsingh's shirt during, the chase was characterised as a pure fabrication.
It was also held that there is no evidence to prove that either the shirt
belongs to Sobalsingh or that the hole in the shirt which could only be caused
by a revolver bullet could not have been caused by Sohrab because the pieces
found in the body of Sobalsingh were not from the revolver but are pellets
fired from a gun. The evidences of Madhosingh P.W. 1, the father of the
deceased and the other witnesses Arjun P.W. 2, Kishandas P.W. 6, Babulal P.W.
31 were disbelieved.
of the seven incised injuries, most of them
were postmortem wounds as spoken to by Dr. Pawar and at any rate the story that
Bashir and Sardar stabbed Sobalsingh with knives was not to be believed. The
Sessions Judge came to the conclusion, even though the ballistics expert had
not been asked to give his opinion by reference to the autopsy report, from at
least the first set of injuries found on Sobalsingh on the abdomen, on the
back, and on the epigastric region that they were not the result of the
deceased having been shot while lying, face up, on the ground thepellets came
out of the body at a higher level, then the level at which they had entered the
body which would show that the person who shot should have been at a
considerable lower level than the victim, unless it be that the latter was
bending or the former kneeling; the evidence, however, shows that the incident
happened on even ground and no one speaks of anybody bending or kneeling, nor
can it be a case where the victim was held by a person other than the shooter;
even the second set of injuries were held not to have been probably inflicted
while the victim was lying on the ground and assailant was standing; from the
pellets extracted from Nadar's hands, they could not have been caused in the
manner spoken to by the witnesses; and the story of firing with the pistol
forms such an integral part of the story of the L1286Sup.CI/72 476 prosecution
case as a whole, it would be unsafe to believe, the witnesses in this regard,
whether in respect of pistol or generally.
The High Court noted that a number of
contradictions were pointed out in the account given by the eye witnesses P.W.
3, P.W. 4, P.W. 5, P.W. 6, P.W. 7 and P.W. 31
and that the prosecution has not been able to explain the injury which Nadar
had on the palms of his hands which injuries, according to the High Court,
indicated that he was protecting himself against gun; fire. It is also observed
that the contradictions were not minor as they relate to the spot of the
murder, the fields through which the accused passed and the manner in which the
killing took place.
There is also the question of incompatibility
with the medical evidence regarding the distance from which the gun was shot
and the way it was shot. It was of the view that the incised wounds were more
likely to have been caused after death and the likelihood of a false story of
knives of the assailant cannot be ruled out. As regards firing of a pistol,
there is absolutely no corroboration and the evidence was characterised as a
myth. The hole in the shirt could have been only caused by the firing of the
pistol and nothing collected on the spot showed that Sohrab fired a pistol or
he fired a pistol on Sobalsingh. The story of the pistol was, therefore,
discarded. Notwithstanding these findings, the High Court found that there was
unanimity in the evidence of all the witnesses that Sohrab fired the fatal shot
or shots with a gun given by Nadar. This was corroborated by the medical
evidence which indicates that the injuries on the deceasedwere due to gun shot
injuries.
There is also the evidence of the incident
having taken place in a field in which the deceased was found and there was
unanimity on the point that Nadar handed over the gun to Sohrab and Sohrab
fired a shot on Sobalsingh who fell down after which a second shot was fired.
The version of the accused that the gun shot injuries were caused accidentally,
well not 'believed. The defence story that Nadar was easing himself when he was
attacked all of a sudden after which a scuffle between Sohrab and Sobalsingh
took place resulting in the accidental firing of the gun was difficult to comprehend.
The High Court however dealt with the several contentions urged in respect of
the story that Nadar had handed a gun to Sohrab which he could have easily
fired himself or that Nadar who is said to have caught Sobalsingh from behind
should have been the first to have been injured, or that the directions of the
injury on Sobalsingh indicates that the firing was from below when Sohrab was
at a higher level, or that the witnesses could not have been seen from the
place where they were or that Sohrab fired at Sobalsingh, or that he fired it
when its barrel was at a distance of 1 1/2 cubits from Sobalsingh were all
discussed, but they were not considered to throw any doubt on the main version
of the eye 477 witnesses that it was Sohrab who had fired the gun while Nadar
held the, deceased. The conclusions of, the High Court have been set out as
under:-"The argument that the shooter should have been at a level lower
the the victim and such a state has not been told by witnesses. Rather the
story clearly excludes such a possibility has no doubt some merit if we accept
the story of the prosecution witnesses as told by them. We do not fully accept
the same. In fact they saw the incident from a distance and the detailed
descriptions are all inferences as even admitted by one of them. A man running
for life and a mare following would be away quite far from the witnesses.
Number of fields mentioned by the witnesses intervened
the witnesses and the spot. In fact it has been a point taken up by the defence
that on account of the distance they could not see. What we feel is they could
see that broad facts.
Sohrab's running on a mare, broad and easily
visible actions that one could see, from a distance. The rest of the details
are imaginations and inferences Nadar's injuries on his palms cannot be
explained strictly on the basis of the prosecution version; but as we have seen
the details are unbelievable we can only say the witnesses could not see how
the injuries on Nadar's palms were received. They were received undoubtedly on
the spot, and when gun was fired.
Sobalsingh was no doubt held or appeared to
have been held by Nadar from a distance. He must have tried to move. That
movement was responsible for injury to his palms. The unassailable story
therefore remains is that Sohrab fired a gun at sobalsingh and Nadar handed
over the gun to him. Both of them are therefore guilty." In the above view
it was held that both Sohrab and Nadar were guilty of an offence of murder
under Section 302 read with 34.
We have at some length pointed out that the
Sessions Judge and the High Court were in agreement on certain aspects of the
case in respect of which witnesses tried to embellish and exaggerate. But that,
by itself, in our view, does not assist the accused, nor can the broad features
of the evidence of the prosecution case be doubted in respect of the version
that on the day of the occurrence both the appellants and the deceased were in
the field where the dead body was found, that Sohrab was riding a mare that he
chased the deceased, that Nadar came with a gun and handed it over to Sohrab
and that Sohrab fired at the deceased, which also caused injury to Nadar. The
position of the eye witnesses in relation to the occurrence may have been such
that all the details could not have been noticed, but that the salient features
of the 478 prosecution story wastrue is established by the evidence of the eye
witnesses. It appears to us: that merely because there have been discrepancies
and contradictions in the evidence of some or all of the witnesses does not
mean, that, the entire evidence of the prosecution has to be discarded. It is
only after exercising caution and care and sifting the evidence to separate the
truth from untruth, exaggeration, embellishments and improvement, the Court
comes. to the conclusion that what can be accepted implicates the appellants it
will convict them. This Court has held that faksus in uno falsus in ownibus is
not a sound rule for the reason that hardly one comes across a witness whose
evidence does not contain a grain of untruth or at any rate exaggeration,
embroideries or embellishments. In most cases, the witnesses when asked about
details venture to give some answer, not necessarily true or relevant for fear
that their evidence may not be accepted in respect of the main incident which
the have witnessed but that is not to say that their evidence as to the salient
features of the case after cautious scrutiny cannot be considered though where
the substratum of the prosecution case or material part of the evidence is
disbelievable it will not 'be permissible for the Court to reconstruct a story
of its own out of the rest. It is also urged that in an appeal against
acquittal, the Appellate Court must consider the reasons which impelled the
Trial Court to acquit the accused but whereas in this case the High Court
having agreed with most of the conclusion-% arrived at by the Sessions Judge it
could not reverse the order of acquittal. The Privy Council case in Sheo Swarup
and Ors. v. King Emperor(1) and the judgment of this Court adopting the view
enunciated therein have been referred to us. It is now well established that
under Sections 417, 418 and 423 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, the High
Court has full power to review at large the evidence unon which the order of
acquittal was founded and to reach the, conclusion that upon that evidence the
order of acquittal should be reversed. No limitation should be placed upon that
power unless it be found expressly stated in the Code. But in exercising the
power conferred by the Code and before reaching its conclusions upon fact, the
High Court should and will always give proper weight and consideration to such
matters as (1) the views of the trial Judge as to the credibility of the
witnesses; (2) the presumption of innocence in favour of the accused, a
presumption certainly not weakened by the fact that he has been' acquitted at
his trial; (3) the right of the accused to the benefit of any doubt; and (4)
the slowness of an appellate Court in disturbing a finding of fact arrived at
by a Judge who had the advantage of seeing the witnesses.
This principle was adopted in Sanwant Singh
v. State of Rajasthan(2); in Agarwal v. State of Maharashtra(3) and it was
pointed out that the different phraseology used (1) A.I.R. 1934 P.C. 227. (3)
[1963]2 S.C.R. 405. (2) [1961] 3 S.C.R. 120.
479 in the earlier judgment of this Court
such as "substantial and compelling reasons", "good and
sufficiently cogent reasons" and strong reasons" are not intended to
curtail the powers of the .Appellate Court in an appeal against the acquittal
to review the entire evidence and to come to its own conclusion but in doing so
it should not only consider every matter on record having a bearing on the
questions of fact and the reasons given by the Court below in support of its
order of acquittal in arriving at a conclusion on those facts but should
express the reasons in its judgment, which led it to hold that the acquittal
was not justified. In those cases it was pointed out by this Court that the
principles laid down by the Judicial Committee in Sheo Swarup case afford a
correct guide of the court's approach to a case disposing of such appeal. We
have in this case shown earlier the ]High Court did consider all aspects
considered by the Sessions Court with most of which it also concurred. It,
however, dealt with some of the aspects in which Sessions Court had not given a
clear cut finding and in fact that Court had lost itself in a maize of
contradictions and omitted to consider the overwhelming evidence that Sohrab
had fired the fatal shot at Sobalsingh with the gun given by Nadar. Both
Sessions Court as well as the High Court rejected the story of Nadar that he
was urinating when he received the injuries and ,both of them further rejected
the story that the gun went off in the struggle. Once the Sessions Judge had
rejected the defence story, he should have considered the evidence of the
prosecution that Sohrab had fired the gun given by Nadar and fired it at
Sobalsingh but if it did not accept that story, it could have given a reason
for not doing so. But as we said earlier it was overwhelmed by the various
contradictions and failed to consider what effect it had on unanimous version
of the prosecution witnesses that Nadar had given the gun to Sohrab and Sohrab
had fired with it at Sobalsingh. Within an hour of the incident, an F.I.R. was
lodged in which the main story as spoken to by the witness was given. In it the
informant, Mahadeo had stated is follows "I saw that Sohrab caught Sobal
on the, boundary line of the field of Chensingh and Nadar came with a gun from.
the side, of the cart. I.Bashir and Sardar came there running from the side of
the cart road' and reached there. Nadar gave the 'gun to Sohrab and caught
Sobal and Sohrab fired at the back of Sobal. As a result of which Sobal fell
down and he made another fire at him while fallen. Sardar and Bashir struck
blows with knives having knelt on Sobal to kill him while fallen. After this
Soharab got on his mare and went with Nadar, Bashir and Sardar to the place
Where 480 the cart of the wife of Kudarat was parked and from there they went
towards Panod." Though in so far as the part played by Sardar and Bashir
as stated therein has not been accepted with respect to the other part the
evidence of the eye witnesses fully agrees with the verison given in the F.I.R.
The salient feature of the evidence of the prosecution case are not really
denied by the appellants Soharab and Nadar, Soharab admitted that they had
started at 7 A.M. to attend the Court, that he was on the mare, that Nadar, his
sisterin-law, servant Gabbu and one child were going in a cart, that they had a
dispute with Chhogya Chamar and he was going ahead of them, and that the cart
was behind him. The prosecution witnesses have also deposed to these facts.
What the accused Sohrab says thereafter is that he had heard the sound of the
firing of the gun. He got down from the mare and saw, in the meantime one more
fire was shot. He saw that Nadar was running away towards North and Sobalsingh
was following him. He got to him on the mare. At that time Sobalsingh was
filling a cartridge in the gun. He jumped off from the mare and caught hold of
the gun. Sobalsingh caught the gun from the side of the barrel and tried to get
hold of him. While Sobalsingh and he were both trying to catch hold of the gun,
the gun fired and Sobalsingh fell down. We find the following narration by
Sohrab thereafter to be significant.
He says :
"I dropped the gun. As it fell down
again fired. Blood was coming out of the hands of Nadar. I went to Kadava being
afraid where I have relatives. I told Nadar to go and make a report at the
Police Stations. I got myself relieved of the fear and then after twothree days
I myself went to the Police Station." This statement shows that the gun
was in his hands and it is only after that two shots emanated from it. of
course, according to the accused version, it went off when Sobalsingh and he were
struggling with it and again when he dropped it. That Nadar was injured as a
result of that gunshot was also not denied. How-ever, when Nadar was running
away, he was injured on the palms is not denied.
Nadar in his statement also admits that on
the day of the occurrence Gabbu, his sister-in-law and he was going to attend
the dated fixed in the case of Chhogya Chamar at Sawer, that Sohrab had started
on a mare before them, that their cart came ahead of Maharajganj, that behind
the cart at some distance Sobalsingh and Chhogya were coming, that Sobalsingh
had a 481 gun in his hands, and that he (Nadar) got down from the cart and sat
for urine in a field at some distance. At once a gun was fired. It struck on
his hands, and he lay down facing the sky. One more fire was shot but it did
not strike him. He got up and ran and cried out "save, save'.
Sobalsingh came behind him. He ran and went
towards the cart. Having sat in a cart he came to Sawer with his sister-in-law
and from there he sent her to Khajrana by a motor bus, and went to the Police
Station to lodge a report.
There the Sub-Inspector gave him beatings and
did not record his report. Now, according to the version of this accused, the
very first shot had injured his hands and he lay down facing the sky. But
according to the version given by Sohrab after he heard the fire from the gun,
he saw that Nadar was running away towards the north, but this is not spoken to
by Nadar, who says he fell down with his face upward. The second shot according
to Sohrab was the one which went off in the struggle and the third shot was the
one which went off when he dropped the gun and it was then that he saw blood
was coming from the hands of Nadar. The statements of these two accused, as we
have said earlier, lend further credence to the evidence of the prosecution
that the incident took place as alleged in the field where Nadar and Sobalsingh
were present, that there was a fire from the gun as a result of that fire and
the subsequent one, Sobalsingh died. That the shot was fired when the gun was
in the hands of Sohrab, is spoken to by all the witnesses and the High Court is
justified in coming to the conclusion that Sohrab had fired it deliberately at
Sobalsingh. The version of the accused Sohrab also lends support to it. The
actual fatal shot was fired when the gun was in the hands of Sohrab as a result
of scuffle or deliberately and the second shot also occurred when the gun was
in the hands of Sohrab, whether it was fired on it being dropped or
deliberately as spoken to by the witnesses. As we stated earlier both the
Sessions Judge as well as the High Court have disbelieved that the firing of
the gun was accidental as a result of which Sobalsingh was killed. In our view,
the defence version does not fit in with the postmortem report or the evidence
of the Doctor who conducted it. Even on the statement of the accused the theory
that the shooter was at a lower level of the victim or the victim was kneeling
is not borne out by anything in the medical evidence. Injury number (1) is
sought to be linked with injury (xi) by pointing out that the 482 latter is an
entry wound and the former exhibit wound of that entry wound. It has not been
pointed out to us nor could we find any justification for this assumption from
the doctor's evidence. All that was said is that one was an entry wound and was
spoken to in this regard. In these circumstances in what the other exhit but
that does not mean that the exhit wound (i) is that of the entry wound (xi).
No probe was made and noting position the gun
was fired or in what position asailant and the victim were poised, it is
difficult to determine from the evidence.
In this view, we confirm the judgment of the
High Court and dismiss the appeal.
V.P.S.
Appeal dismissed.
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