Gangadhar
Behera & Ors Vs. State of Orissa [2002] Insc
434 (10 October 2002)
Arijit
Pasayat & S.B. Sinha. Arijit Pasayat, J.
This
is the second journey of the accused-appellants to this Court questioning their
conviction on being found guilty of offences punishable under Section 302 read
with Section 149 and Section 148 of the Indian Penal Code, 1860 (in short the
'IPC').
On the
first occasion apart from the conviction for the aforesaid offences, the
appellants were also convicted under Section 307 read with Section 149 IPC.
However, in the second instance, the said conviction has been altered to one
under Section 324 read with Section 149 IPC.
Filtering
out unnecessary details, the prosecution version as unfolded during trial is as
follows:
On
31.12.1988, there was an altercation between Jairam Das and Sadananda
(hereinafter referred to as the deceased) on one hand and Jagabandhu Samal
(D.W.1) on the other near Motto Hat in connection with occupation/construction
of a shed in a market area.
When Jagabandhu
suddenly got up his head struck against a bamboo protruding into the thatch and
he sustained some injury. Subsequently, when Jairam Das (PW-1), Gagan Das
(PW-5) and the deceased proceeded towards their village near Balabhadrapur Sasan,
they found that the accused persons armed with lathi, tentas etc. were coming.
Being
afraid, the deceased and his companions ran towards to the village. Gagan Das
(P.W. 5) went inside the house of Sikhar Bal whereas the other three concealed
themselves inside the house of Nilakantha Rath (P.W. 8). The house was
surrounded by the accused persons who dealt blows on the door and walls of the
house and some of them entered inside the house. Accused Panchanan (appellant
10 in the present appeal) and Subash Samal (appellant 7 in the present appeal)
dragged the three persons and assaulted them. At that time, one of the accused
persons shouted that police personnel were coming and subsequently all the
accused persons fled away. PW-5 who saw the incident through an opening in the
door leaf of the house of Sikhar Bal lodged the report before the Police which
was treated as the First Information Report. Apart from PW-1 who was injured in
the incident and PW-5, the informant, the occurrence was seen by some other
persons including PWs. 2, 3, 4, 7 and 8. The last two witnesses are the owners
of the house wherein the deceased and his companions had taken refuge and also
spoke about the occurrence but except a few they were not able to name the
other accused persons. Investigation was undertaken and on completion thereof,
charge sheet was placed.
The
accused persons gave a different version of the incident.
According
to them, the allegation that the accused persons being armed followed the
deceased and his companions to Balabhadrapur Sasan is incorrect. In fact, some
incident took place in the Motto Hat itself where DW-1 was assaulted and in
order to save himself, he had brandished a 'Bahunga'. As a result, the
deceased, PW-1 and Sanatan were injured. To substantiate their plea, they
examined DW-1 and nine others. It was indicated that the appellant-Subash Samal
is the son of DW-1. It was claimed by them that since they belonged to
Communist Party and the deceased belonged to Congress Party, they were falsely
implicated.
Originally,
there were 21 accused persons. The Additional Session Judge, Bhadrak acquitted
six of them and convicted the other 15 under Section 302 read with Section 149
IPC and Section 148, IPC as well as under Section 307 read with Section 149 IPC
and sentenced them to suffer imprisonment for life for the conviction and
sentence under Section 302 read with Section 149 IPC, and three years rigorous
imprisonment on each count i.e. for offences punishable under Section 148 and
under Section 307 read with Section 149 IPC. The sentences were directed to run
concurrently.
The 15
accused persons who had been convicted preferred an appeal before the Orissa
High Court. A Division Bench by its judgment dated 18.4.1995 dismissed the
appeal i.e. Criminal Appeal No.133/90. The said judgment of the High Court was
assailed before this Court in appeal arising out of Special Leave Petition
No.4170/1995.This Court noticed that the High Court had disposed of the appeal
in a very casual manner without even analyzing the evidence and there was no
proper application of mind. The matter was, therefore, remitted back to the
High Court. That is how the High Court heard the appeal again and by the
impugned judgment has upheld the conviction of 10 and acquitted the rest of the
accused. It is to be noted that in respect of Krishna Mohanty (accused No.17)
the High Court noticed that there was no finding recorded by the Trial Court
either finding him guilty or otherwise, and, therefore, it was observed that it
must be deemed that the said Krishna Mohanty had been acquitted by the Trial
Court. The High Court by its impugned judgment specifically directed acquittal
of four of the accused persons i.e. appellants 1, 2, 3 and 15 before it. The
judgment of the High Court dated 16.7.1999 is the subject matter of challenge
in this appeal.
At the
Special Leave Petition stage because of non-surrender of accused appellant
No.7, Subash Samal, the petition was dismissed by order dated 18.7.2000, so far
as he is concerned.
In
support of the appeal, Mr. S. Misra, learned counsel has submitted that though
by its previous judgment this Court had required the High Court to analyse the
evidence vis--vis every accused, it has not been done. In fact, as was done
previously, the High Court has proceeded on generalized basis. The main eye witnesses
PWs. 1 and 5 are relatives of the deceased and the other eye-witnesses are
members of the same political party to which the deceased and PWs. 1 and 5
belonged. The witnesses have not specifically attributed any definite role to
the accused persons. In fact they have in an omnibus manner stated that accused
persons had assaulted. It is improbable that PW-5 could have seen the
occurrence, through a small hole as claimed by him. The four accused persons
who have been acquitted by the Trial Court stood on similar footing and the
logic for their acquittal is equally applicable to the present appellants. Sikhar
Bal in whose house PW 5 claimed to have taken shelter, has not been examined
and PWs. 7 and 8 who are the independent witnesses have also not identified all
the accused persons and only identified few of them. Sanatan who, the
prosecution claimed, was injured has also not been examined. Overt act, if the
prosecution version is to be accepted, has been attributed to accused Katia, Subash
Samal, Hemant Nayak and Panchanan Bal (appellants 4, 7, 8 and 10 respectively).
There is no reason as to why the others should have been convicted. The
ingredients of Section 149 are not present because the witnesses have not said
about the specific roles, if any, played by the accused and mere omnibus
statement is not sufficient to bring in application of Section 149. The defence
version is more probable and should have been accepted. There was a discrepancy
between the evidence of the so-called eye-witnesses and the medical evidence on
record. With reference to Bolineedi Venkataramaiah and Ors. v. State of Andhra Pradesh (AIR 1994 SC 76) it has been stated
that before the application of Section 149 the evidence of interested witnesses
has to be carefully analysed and according to learned counsel the said has not
been done in the present case. With reference to Kamaksha Rai and Ors. v. State
of U.P. (AIR 2000 SC 53) it has been
submitted that omnibus statements are not sufficient to bring in application of
Section 149. It was also submitted that since some of the accused persons have
been acquitted either by the Trial Court and the High Court and discarding of
evidence of the so-called eye witnesses, a different yardstick should not have
been applied so far as the appellants are concerned.
In
response, Mr. J.R. Das, learned counsel for the State submitted that the
evidence of the eye-witnesses is clear, cogent and credible. Merely because
they belonged to a particular political party there is no reason as to why they
would falsely implicate the accused persons. No foundation for falsely
implicating them has been established. All the accused persons have been named.
It has been clearly brought on evidence that they were armed while chasing
deceased and the injured witnesses and were shouting to bring them out when
they had taken shelter in the house of Sikhar Bal. Merely because Sikhar Bal
has not been examined, that does not in any way dilute the evidence of eye
witnesses. Further, much has been made out of the non-examination of Sanatan.
It has been clearly brought on record that his whereabouts are not known and,
therefore, he could not be examined. Further, PW 7 has not stated that except
two accused persons whom he had named and identified, others were not present.
He has
never stated that the others were not there, and only stated that he knew the
name of two persons. The common intention has been clearly established. Merely
because some of the accused persons have been acquitted, that does not render
the evidence of the eye-witnesses suspect. Two Courts have categorically found
that the accused persons were armed while chasing the deceased and the others,
entered into the house where they were taking shelter and brought them out, and
one of the witnesses had sustained injuries in the occurrence, while deceased
lost his life. These findings of fact are conclusive in nature and there is no
scope for any interference.
We
shall first deal with the contention regarding interestedness of the witnesses
for furthering prosecution version. Relationship is not a factor to affect
credibility of a witness. It is more often than not that a relation would not
conceal actual culprit and make allegations against an innocent person.
Foundation has to be laid if plea of false implication is made. In such cases,
the court has to adopt a careful approach and analyse evidence to find out
whether it is cogent ad credible.
In Dalip
Singh and Ors. v. The State of Punjab (AIR
1953 SC 364) it has been laid down as under:- "A witness is normally to be
considered independent unless he or she springs from sources which are likely
to be tainted and that usually means unless the witness has cause, such as
enmity against the accused, to wish to implicate him falsely. Ordinarily a
close relation would be the last to screen the real culprit and falsely
implicate an innocent person. It is true, when feelings run high and there is
personal cause for enmity, that there is a tendency to drag in an innocent
person against whom a witness has a grudge along with the guilty, but
foundation must be laid for such a criticism and the mere fact of relationship
far from being a foundation is often a sure guarantee of truth. However, we are
not attempting any sweeping generalization. Each case must be judged on its own
facts. Our observations are only made to combat what is so often put forward in
cases before us as a general rule of prudence. There is no such general rule.
Each case must be limited to and be governed by its own facts." The above
decision has since been followed in Guli Chand and Ors. v. State of Rajasthan (1974 (3) SCC 698) in which Vadivelu
Thevar v. State of Madras (AIR 1957 SC 614) was also relied upon.
We may
also observe that the ground that the witness being a close relative and
consequently being a partisan witness, should not be relied upon, has no
substance. This theory was repelled by this Court as early as in Dalip Singh's
case (supra) in which surprise was expressed over the impression which
prevailed in the minds of the Members of the Bar that relatives were not
independent witnesses.
Speaking
through Vivian Bose, J. it was observed:
"We
are unable to agree with the learned Judges of the High Court that the
testimony of the two eyewitnesses requires corroboration. If the foundation for
such an observation is based on the fact that the witnesses are women and that
the fate of seven men hangs on their testimony, we know of no such rule. If it
is grounded on the reason that they are closely related to the deceased we are
unable to concur. This is a fallacy common to many criminal cases and one which
another Bench of this Court endeavoured to dispel in 'Rameshwar v. State of Rajasthan' (AIR 1952 SC 54 at p.59). We find,
however, that it unfortunately still persists, if not in the judgments of the
Courts, at any rate in the arguments of counsel." Again in Masalti and
Ors. v. State of U.P. (AIR 1965 SC 202) this Court observed: (p, 209-210 para
14):
"But
it would, we think, be unreasonable to contend that evidence given by witnesses
should be discarded only on the ground that it is evidence of partisan or
interested witnesses.......The mechanical rejection of such evidence on the
sole ground that it is partisan would invariably lead to failure of justice. No
hard and fast rule can be laid down as to how much evidence should be
appreciated. Judicial approach has to be cautious in dealing with such
evidence; but the plea that such evidence should be rejected because it is partisan
cannot be accepted as correct." To the same effect is the decision in
State of Punjab v. Jagir Singh (AIR 1973 SC 2407) and Lehna v. State of Haryana
( 2002 (3) SCC 76). Stress was laid by the accused-appellants on the non-
acceptance of evidence tendered by some witnesses to contend about desirability
to throw out entire prosecution case. In essence prayer is to apply the
principle of "falsus in uno falsus in omnibus" (false in one thing,
false in everything). This plea is clearly untenable. Even if major portion of
evidence is found to be deficient, in case residue is sufficient to prove guilt
of an accused, notwithstanding acquittal of number of other co-accused persons,
his conviction can be maintained. It is the duty of Court to separate grain
from chaff. Where chaff can be separated from grain, it would be open to the
Court to convict an accused notwithstanding the fact that evidence has been
found to be deficient to prove guilt of other accused persons. Falsity of
particular material witness or material particular would not ruin it from the
beginning to end. The maxim "falsus in uno falsus in omnibus" has no
application in India and the witnesses cannot be branded
as liar. The maxim "falsus in uno falsus in omnibus" has not received
general acceptance nor has this maxim come to occupy the status of rule of law.
It is merely a rule of caution. All that it amounts to, is that in such cases
testimony may be disregarded, and not that it must be disregarded. The doctrine
merely involves the question of weight of evidence which a Court may apply in a
given set of circumstances, but it is not what may be called 'a mandatory rule
of evidence'. (See Nisar Alli v. The State of Uttar Pradesh (AIR 1957 SC 366).
Merely because some of the accused persons have been acquitted, though evidence
against all of them, so far as direct testimony went, was the same does not
lead as a necessary corollary that those who have been convicted must also be
acquitted. It is always open to a Court to differentiate accused who had been
acquitted from those who were convicted. (See Gurucharan Singh and Anr. v. State
of Punjab ( AIR 1956 SC 460). The doctrine is a dangerous one specially in
India for if a whole body of the testimony were to be rejected, because witness
was evidently speaking an untruth in some aspect, it is to be feared that
administration of criminal justice would come to a dead-stop. Witnesses just
cannot help in giving embroidery to a story, however, true in the main.
Therefore,
it has to be appraised in each case as to what extent the evidence is worthy of
acceptance, and merely because in some respects the Court considers the same to
be insufficient for placing reliance on the testimony of a witness, it does not
necessarily follow as a matter of law that it must be disregarded in all
respects as well.
The
evidence has to be shifted with care. The aforesaid dictum is not a sound rule
for the reason that one hardly comes across a witness whose evidence does not
contain a grain of untruth or at any rate exaggeration, embroideries or
embellishment. (See Sohrab s/o Beli Nayata and Anr. v. The State of Madhya
Pradesh 1972 3 SCC 751) and Ugar Ahir and Ors. v. The State of Bihar (AIR 1965
SC 277). An attempt has to be made to, as noted above, in terms of felicitous
metaphor, separate grain from the chaff, truth from falsehood. Where it is not
feasible to separate truth from falsehood, because grain and chaff are
inextricably mixed up, and in the process of separation an absolutely new case
has to be reconstructed by divorcing essential details presented by the
prosecution completely from the context and the background against which they
are made, the only available course to be made is to discard the evidence in toto.
(See Zwinglee Ariel v. State of Madhya Pradesh (AIR 1954 SC 15) and Balaka
Singh and Ors. v. The State of Punjab. (AIR 1975 SC 1962). As observed by this
Court in State of Rajasthan v. Smt. Kalki and Anr. (AIR 1981 SC
1390), normal discrepancies in evidence are those which are due to normal
errors of observation, normal errors of memory due to lapse of time, due to
mental disposition such as shock and horror at the time of occurrence and those
are always there however honest and truthful a witness may be. Material
discrepancies are those which are not normal, and not expected of a normal
person.
Courts
have to label the category to which a discrepancy may be categorized. While
normal discrepancies do not corrode the credibility of a party's case, material
discrepancies do so. These aspects were highlighted recently in Krishna Mochi
and Ors. v. State of Bihar etc. (JT 2002 (4) SC 186). Accusations have been
clearly established against accused-appellants in the case at hand. The Courts
below have categorically indicated the distinguishing features in evidence so
far as acquitted and convicted accused are concerned.
It is
submitted that benefit of doubt should be given on account of co-accused's
acquittal. It was submitted that the evidence is inadequate to fasten guilt,
and therefore prosecution cannot be said to have established its case beyond
doubt.
Exaggerated
devotion to the rule of benefit of doubt must not nurture fanciful doubts or
lingering suspicion and thereby destroy social defence. Justice cannot be made
sterile on the plea that it is better to let hundred guilty escape than punish
an innocent. Letting guilty escape is not doing justice according to law. [See:
Gurbachan Singh v. Satpal Singh and Others [AIR 1990 SC 209]. Prosecution is
not required to meet any and every hypothesis put forward by the accused. [See
State of U.P. v. Ashok Kumar Srivastava [AIR 1992 SC 840]. A reasonable doubt is
not an imaginary, trivial or merely possible doubt, but a fair doubt based upon
reason and common sense.
It
must grow out of the evidence in the case. If a case is proved perfectly, it is
argued that it is artificial; if a case has some flaws inevitable because human
beings are prone to err, it is argued that it is too imperfect. One wonders
whether in the meticulous hypersensitivity to eliminate a rare innocent from
being punished, many guilty persons must be allowed to escape. Proof beyond
reasonable doubt is a guideline, not a fetish. [See Inder Singh and Anr. v.
State (Delhi Admn.) ( AIR 1978 SC 1091)]. Vague hunches cannot take place of
judicial evaluation. "A judge does not preside over a criminal trial,
merely to see that no innocent man is punished.
A
judge also presides to see that a guilty man does not escape. Both are public
duties." (Per Viscount Simon in Stirland v. Director of Public Prosecution
( 1944 AC (PC) 315) quoted in State of U.P. v. Anil Singh ( AIR 1988 SC 1998).
Doubts would be called reasonable if they are free from a zest for abstract
speculation. Law cannot afford any favourite other than truth.
In
matters such as this, it is appropriate to recall the observations of this
Court in Shivaji Sahebrao Bobade v. State of Maharashtra [1974 (1) SCR 489
(492-493)] :
"......The
dangers of exaggerated devotion to the rule of benefit of doubt at the expense
of social defence and to the soothing sentiment that all acquittals are always
good regardless of justice to the victim and the community, demand especial
emphasis in the contemporary context of excalating crime and escape.
The
judicial instrument has a public accountability. The cherished principles or
golden thread of proof beyond reasonable doubt which runs through the web of
our law should not be stretched morbidly to embrace every hunch, hesitancy and
degree of doubt......." ".....The evil of acquitting a guilty person
light- heartedly as a learned author Glanville Williams in 'Proof of Guilt' has
sapiently observed, goes much beyond the simple fact that, just one guilty
person has gone unpunished. If unmerited acquittals become general, they tend
to lead to a cynical disregard of the law, and this in turn leads to a public
demand for harsher legal presumptions against indicted 'persons' and more
severe punishment of those who are found guilty. Thus too frequent acquittals
of the guilty may lead to a ferocious penal law, eventually eroding the
judicial protection of the guiltness....." ".......a miscarriage of
justice may arise from the acquittal of the guilty no less than from the
conviction of the innocent....." The position was again illuminatingly
highlighted in State of U.P. v. Krishna Gopal (AIR 1988 SC 2154).
At
this juncture, it would be appropriate to deal with the plea that ocular
evidence and medical evidence are at variance. It would be erroneous to accord
undue primacy to the hypothetical answers of medical witnesses to exclude the
eye-witnesses' account which had to be tested independently and not treated as
the "variable" keeping the medical evidence as the
"constant".
In
Krishna Gopal's case (supra), the position has been succinctly stated as
follows:
"It
is trite that where the eye-witnesses' account is found credible and
trustworthy, medical opinion pointing to alternative possibilities is not
accepted as conclusive.
Witnesses,
as Bantham said, are the eyes and ears of justice. Hence the importance and
primacy of the quality of the trial process. Eye witnesses' account would
require a careful independent assessment and evaluation for their credibility
which should not be adversely prejudged making any other evidence, including
medical evidence, as the sole touchstone for the test of such credibility. The
evidence must be tested for its inherent consistency and the inherent probability
of the story;
consistency
with the account of other witnesses held to be credit-worthy; consistency with
the undisputed facts the 'credit' of the witnesses; their performance in the
witness-box; their power of observation etc. Then the probative value of such
evidence becomes eligible to be put into the scales for a cumulative
evaluation.
A
person has, no doubt, a profound right not to be convicted of an offence which
is not established by the evidential standard of proof beyond reasonable doubt.
Though
this standard is a higher standard, there is, however, no absolute standard.
What degree of probability amounts to 'proof' is an exercise particularly to
each case. Referring to of probability amounts to 'proof' is an exercise the
inter-dependence of evidence and the confirmation of one piece of evidence by
another a learned author says: (See "The Mathematics of Proof II" :
Glanville Williams: Criminal Law Review, 1979 by Sweet and Maxwell, p. 340
(342).
"The
simple multiplication rule does not apply if the separate pieces of evidence
are dependent. Two events are dependent when they tend to occur together, and
the evidence of such events may also be said to be dependent. In a criminal
case, different pieces of evidence directed to establishing that the defendant
did the prohibited act with the specified state of mind are generally
dependent. A juror may feel doubt whether to credit an alleged confession, and
doubt whether to infer guilt from the fact that the defendant fled from
justice.
But
since it is generally guilty rather than innocent people who make confessions,
and guilty rather than innocent people who run away, the two doubts are not to
be multiplied together. The one piece of evidence may confirm the other."
Doubts would be called reasonable if they are free from a zest for abstract
speculation. Law cannot afford any favourite other than truth. To constitute
reasonable doubt, it must be free from an over emotional response.
Doubts
must be actual and substantial doubts as to the guilt of the accused person
arising from the evidence, or from the lack of it, as opposed to mere vague
apprehensions. A reasonable doubt is not an imaginary, trivial or a merely
possible doubt; but a fair doubt based upon reason and commonsense. It must
grow out of the evidence in the case.
The
concepts of probability, and the degrees of it, cannot obviously be expressed
in terms of units to be mathematically enumerated as to how many of such units
constitute proof beyond reasonable doubt. There is an unmistakable subjective
element in the evaluation of the degrees of probability and the quantum of
proof.
Forensic
probability must, in the last analysis, rest on a robust common sense and,
ultimately on the trained intuitions of the judge. While the protection given
by the criminal process to the accused persons is not to be eroded, at the same
time, uninformed legitimization of trivialities would make a mockery of
administration of criminal justice." Another plea which was emphasized
relates to the question whether Section 149, IPC has any application for
fastening the constructive liability which is the sine qua non for its
operation. The emphasis is on the common object and not on common intention.
Mere
presence in an unlawful assembly cannot render a person liable unless there was
a common object and he was actuated by that common object and that object is
one of those set out in Section 141.
Where
common object of an unlawful assembly is not proved, the accused persons cannot
be convicted with the help of Section 149.
The
crucial question to determine is whether the assembly consisted of five or more
persons and whether the said persons entertained one or more of the common
objects, as specified in Section 141. It cannot be laid down as a general
proposition of law that unless an overt act is proved against a person, who is
alleged to be a member of unlawful assembly, it cannot be said that he is a
member of an assembly. The only thing required is that he should have
understood that the assembly was unlawful and was likely to commit any of the
acts which fall within the purview of Section 141. The word 'object' means the
purpose or design and, in order to make it 'common', it must be shared by all.
In other words, the object should be common to the persons, who compose the assembly,
that is to say, they should all be aware of it and concur in it. A common
object may be formed by express agreement after mutual consultation, but that
is by no means necessary. It may be formed at any stage by all or a few members
of the assembly and the other members may just join and adopt it. Once formed,
it need not continue to be the same. It may be modified or altered or abandoned
at any stage. The expression 'in prosecution of common object' as appearing in
Section 149 have to be strictly construed as equivalent to 'in order to attain
the common object'. It must be immediately connected with the common object by
virtue of the nature of the object. There must be community of object and the
object may exist only up to a particular stage, and not thereafter. Members of
an unlawful assembly may have community of object up to certain point beyond
which they may differ in their objects and the knowledge, possessed by each
member of what is likely to be committed in prosecution of their common object
may vary not only according to the information at his command, but also
according to the extent to which he shares the community of object, and as a
consequence of this the effect of Section 149, IPC may be different on
different members of the same assembly.
'Common
object' is different from a 'common intention' as it does not require a prior
concert and a common meeting of minds before the attack. It is enough if each
has the same object in view and their number is five or more and that they act
as an assembly to achieve that object. The 'common object' of an assembly is to
be ascertained from the acts and language of the members composing it, and from
a consideration of all the surrounding circumstances. It may be gathered from
the course of conduct adopted by the members of the assembly. What the common
object of the unlawful assembly is at a particular stage of the incident is
essentially a question of fact to be determined, keeping in view the nature of
the assembly, the arms carried by the members, and the behaviour of the members
at or near the scene of the incident. It is not necessary under law that in all
cases of unlawful assembly, with an unlawful common object, the same must be
translated into action or be successful. Under the Explanation to Section 141,
an assembly which was not unlawful when it was assembled, may subsequently
become unlawful. It is not necessary that the intention or the purpose, which
is necessary to render an assembly an unlawful one comes into existence at the
outset. The time of forming an unlawful intent is not material. An assembly
which, at its commencement or even for some time thereafter, is lawful, may
subsequently become unlawful. In other words it can develop during the course
of incident at the spot co instanti.
Section
149, IPC consists of two parts. The first part of the section means that the
offence to be committed in prosecution of the common object must be one which
is committed with a view to accomplish the common object. In order that the
offence may fall within the first part, the offence must be connected
immediately with the common object of the unlawful assembly of which the
accused was member. Even if the offence committed is not in direct prosecution
of the common object of the assembly, it may yet fall under Section 141, if it
can be held that the offence was such as the members knew was likely to be
committed and this is what is required in the second part of the section. The
purpose for which the members of the assembly set out or desired to achieve is
the object. If the object desired by all the members is the same, the knowledge
that is the object which is being pursued is shared by all the members and they
are in general agreement as to how it is to be achieved and that is now the
common object of the assembly. An object is entertained in the human mind, and
it being merely a mental attitude, no direct evidence can be available and,
like intention, has generally to be gathered from the act which the person
commits and the result therefrom. Though no hard and fast rule can be laid down
under the circumstances from which the common object can be called out, it may
reasonably be collected from the nature of the assembly, arms it carries and behaviour
at or before or after the scene of incident. The word 'knew' used in the second
branch of the section implies something more than a possibility and it cannot
be made to bear the sense of 'might have been known'. Positive knowledge is
necessary.
When
an offence is committed in prosecution of the common object, it would generally
be an offence which the members of the unlawful assembly knew was likely to be
committed in prosecution of the common object. That, however, does not make the
converse proposition true; there may be cases which would come within the second
part but not within the first part. The distinction betweens the two parts of
Section 149 cannot be ignored or obliterated. In every case is would be an
issue to be determined, whether the offence committed falls within the first
part or it was an offence such as the members of the assembly knew to be likely
to be committed in prosecution of the common object and falls within the second
part.
However,
there may be cases which would be within first offences committed in
prosecution of the common object would be generally, if not always, with the
second, namely, offences which the parties knew to be likely committed in the
prosecution of the common object. (See Chikkarange Gowda and others v. State of
Mysore : AIR 1956 SC 731.) The other plea that definite roles have not been
ascribed to the accused and therefore Section 149 is not applicable, is
untenable. A 4-Judge Bench of this Court in Masalti's case (supra) observed as
follows:
"Then
it is urged that the evidence given by the witnesses conforms to the same
uniform pattern and since no specific part is assigned to all the assailants,
that evidence should not have been accepted. This criticism again is not
well-founded. Where a crowd of assailants who are members of an unlawful
assembly proceeds to commit an offence of murder in pursuance of the common
object of the unlawful assembly, it is often not possible for witnesses to
describe accurately the part played by each one of the assailants. Besides, if
a large crowd of persons armed with weapons assaults the intended victims, it
may not be necessary that all of them have to take part in the actual assault.
In the present case, for instance, several weapons were carried by different
members of the unlawful assembly, but it appears that the guns were used and
that was enough to kill 5 persons. In such a case, it would be unreasonable to
contend that because the other weapons carried by the members of the unlawful
assembly were not used, the story in regard to the said weapons itself should
be rejected. Appreciation of evidence in such a complex case is no doubt a
difficult task; but criminal courts have to do their best in dealing with such
cases and it is their duty to sift the evidence carefully and decide which part
of it is true and which is not." To similar effect is the observation in Lalji
v. State of U.P. (1989 (1) SCC 437). It was observed
that :
"Common
object of the unlawful assembly can be gathered from the nature of the
assembly, arms used by them and the behaviour of the assembly at or before the
scene of occurrence. It is an inference to be deduced from the facts and
circumstances of each case." In State of U.P. v. Dan Singh and Ors. (1997 (3) SCC 747) it was observed
that it is not necessary for the prosecution to prove which of the members of the
unlawful assembly did which or what act. Reference was made to Lalji's case
(supra) where it was observed that "while overt act and active
participation may indicate common intention of the person perpetrating the
crime, the mere presence in the unlawful assembly may fasten vicariously
criminal liability under Section 149".
Above
being the position, we find no substance in the plea that evidence of eye
witnesses is not sufficient to fasten guilt by application of Section 149. So
far as the observations made in Kamaksha Rai's case (supra), it is to be noted
that the decision in the said case was rendered in a different factual scenario
altogether. There is always peril in treating the words of a judgment as though
they are words in a legislative enactment, and it is to be remembered that
judicial utterances are made in the setting of the facts of a particular case.
Circumstantial flexibility, one additional or different fact may make a world
of difference between conclusions in two cases (See Padamasundara Rao (dead)
and Ors. v. State of Tamil Nadu & Ors. [JT 2002 (3) SC 1]. It is more so in
a case where conclusions relate to appreciation of evidence in a criminal
trial, as was observed in Krishna Mochi's case (supra) The inevitable result of
this appeal is dismissal which we direct.
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