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SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
Raghbir Singh
Versus
State of Haryana
(D.P. Wadhwa & Ruma Pal, JJ.)
Criminal Appeal No. 645 of 1998
18.04.2000
JUDGMENT
Ruma Pal, J. - This appeal has bee preferred from the decision
of the Punjab and Haryana High Court upholding the appellant's conviction
under Section 302 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC). The appellant was found
guilty by both the Trial Court and the High Court of having fatally shot one
Arjun Singh. The appellant's challenge to this concurrent finding is two fold
: first he says that the eyewitness' account of his complicity was not
credible; second, that even if one were to accept the eye witness' evidence
of the event, he could not have been convicted under Section 302 IPC as the
death of Arjun Singh was in fact caused by renal failure, septicaemia and
respiratory failure.
2. In taking up the first plea, it would be well to keep
in mind that this Court will not interfere with concurrent findings of fact
unless there is strong reason to do so, such as a manifest error of law in
arriving at the finding or when the finding is perverse in the sense that any
material fact has been overlooked or is based on any legally inadmissible
evidence.
3. The eye witnesses in this case were Nasib Singh (PW-1)
the deceased's son, and Banarsi (PW-2), the deceased's brother. Shorn of
unnecessary details, both of them testified that on 26.4.91, at about 5.30
p.m., the appellant armed with a revolver and his brother Kehar Singh, empty
handed, came to the outside of the house of Shiv Dutt in a lane in village
Sakra. Kehar Singh raised `lalkara' that the Sarpanch (Arjun Singh) should be
shot and killed. Thereupon, the appellant fired three shots at Arjun Singh.
The first shot hit Arjun Singh on the right side of his chest, the second hit
him above the elbow of the left arm and the third on the left wrist. Both
PW-1 and PW-2 raised an alarm. Arjun Singh collapsed. Arjun Singh was removed
by PW-1 and PW-2 to the Primary Health Centre, Kaul. The doctor of the Centre
gave some treatment to Arjun Singh but advised that he should be removed to
Kaithal General Hospital. Zile Singh accompanied them from the Primary Health
Centre, Kaul to the General Hospital, Kaithal. Arjun Singh was examined at
Kaithal by the Doctor and was referred to the Post Graduate Institute (PGI),
Chandigarh where Arjun Singh was ultimately admitted. Both PW-1 and PW-2 then
left Chandigarh. PW-1 returned to his village, Sakra. He reached his village
at 8.00 a.m. on 27th April, 1991. He was on his way to Chandigarh via the
Police Station at Dhand when the police met him and he made a statement (Ex.
PA) before the police. The police thereafter accompanied PW-1 to the scene of
the shooting. Arjun Singh expired on 1.5.91 in PGI.
4. Banarasi (PW-2)'s account of the incident of the
shooting was substantially the same. His statement was recorded by the police
on 30th April, 1991. In his cross examination, PW-2 stated that before the
shooting, Arjun Singh was sitting in front of the house of Shiv Dutt when the
appellant fired the first shot from a distance of six feet and then came
forward by about one or two steps when the second shot was fired and the
third shot was fired from about a distance of a 1\2 foot.
5. Both PW-1 and PW-2 stated that the motive for the
appellant's killing Arjun Singh was because of a dispute over land which had
resulted in a fight in which the appellant had received a gun shot injury in
his abdomen. In the criminal case instituted in this connection, the
appellant had alleged that he had been shot by Arjun Singh.
6. The Trial Court found that "PW-1 and PW-2 have
withstood the test of their lengthy cross examination and nothing beneficial
could come out to the defence. There is no material discrepancy or improvement
in their statement which could go to the root of the case to dislodge the
case of the prosecution."
7. In the case before us, the appellant took a plea of
alibi. According to the appellant, between 23.4.91 and 28.4.91, he was at
Delhi along with Mukhtiar Singh (DW-3) and stayed at the house of Bhim Singh
(DW-2). The evidence of DW-3 was rejected by the Trial Court not only on the
ground that he was an interested witness (as the appellant had supported him
in the Assembly Election and because he was an accused in an incident
regarding a dispute over land in which PW-1 was the complainant), but also
because DW-2 categorically denied that either DW-3 or the appellant were
known to him or had stayed with him. DW-2 was not declared hostile by the defence
nor was the finding of the Trial Court in this regard assailed by the
appellant before the High Court.
8. Apart from finding this consistency in the evidence
given by PW-1 and 2, the Trial Court noted that the other oral and
documentary and material evidence corroborated their case. Amongst the
material evidence relied on was the fact that the bullet recovered from the
body of Arjun Singh was found by the Forensic Science Laboratory (FSL) to
have been fired from the revolver (Ex. PO) of the appellant and not from any
other fire arm. The Trial Court accordingly found the guilt of the appellant
and Kehar Singh established and convicted them under Sections 302\34 IPC.
Both were sentenced to imprisonment for life and also to pay a fine of Rs.
2,000\- each.
9. The appellant and Kehar Singh appealed before the High
Court. The complainant, PW-1 also filed a revision application seeking
enhancement of the fine and compensation. The High Court acquitted Kehar
Singh holding that Kehar Singh was not present at the scene of occurrence and
that this finding was fortified from the fact that "but for ascribing
him a `lalkara' that Arjun Singh should be killed, no role has been
attributed to him". The High Court was also of the view that "had
Kehar Singh been at the scene of occurrence, he would not have come empty
handed". However, the evidence of PW-1 and PW-2 as to the presence of
Raghbir Singh and his commission of the crime was accepted after an elaborate
discussion of the evidence. The High Court upheld the appellant's conviction
and also allowed the revision application filed by PW-1 by enhancing the fine
to Rs. 10,000\- and directing the same to be paid to the complainant. In
default, the appellant was to suffer rigorous imprisonment for one year.
10. The grounds on which the credibility of the eye
witnesses' account have been assailed before us are, (i) delay in informing
the police by PW-1; (ii) the fact that the police did not find PW-1 or PW-2
when they went to Kaithal or Chandigarh; and (iii) the non-mentioning of the
names of PW-1 and PW-2 by the doctors or in the records of the Primary Health
Centre, Kaul, General Hospital, Kaithal or the PGI, Chandigarh. These issues
were specifically considered by both the Courts.
11. With regard to the delay in filing the FIR, both the
Courts have found that there was no delay in filing the FIR. The Trial Court
found that the rushing of the victim to the Hospital to save his life instead
of first going to the police station was a satisfactory explanation for the
delay in making the complaint. The view was affirmed by the High Court and we
find no reason to interfere with the same.
12. On the second ground of challenge, the police at
Kaithal were first informed at 7.20 p.m. on 26.4.91 when they received a `ruqa'
from the General Hospital at Kaithal (PW-5). They went to Kaithal to see
Arjun Singh at 8.00 p.m. According to PW-5, no relative of Arjun Singh had
reached there. SI Balbir Singh, CIA staff of Police Station, Dhand said that
he received a wireless message from the police station at Kaithal at 7.30
p.m. on 26.4.91 and reached the PGI, Chandigarh at 3.00 a.m. on 27.4.91 when
he found no one there with Arjun Singh except the attending doctor.
13. PW-1 and PW-2 both side that they left Kaithal's
General Hospital for PGI, Chandigarh at 8.30 p.m. on 26.4.91. Before that
PW-1 was "busy buying medicines etc. and for hiring taxi for removal of
my father to Chandigarh." As far as PW-2 is concerned, he said that
after arriving at Kaithal Hospital at 7.00 p.m. he "remained inside the
laboratory in connection with arranging blood and I also gave my blood in the
laboratory of the Civil Hospital, Kaithal". Both witnesses said that
they arrived at the PGI, Chandigarh at 11.30\11.45 p.m. and both left at 12.30
p.m. after admitting Arjun Singh. For the police not to have seen PW-1 and
PW-2 either at Kaul or Kaithal or at PGI, Chandigarh when they arrived there,
under these circumstances, is not surprising.
14. On the third ground, we find that there was sufficient
evidence to show that Arjun Singh was accompanied by some persons not only at
Kaul but also at Kaithal and at the PGI, Chandigarh and, as correctly held by
the High Court, it would be unreasonable to expect the doctors to name the
persons accompanying the patients. Besides to infer the absence of PW-1 and
PW-2 at the scene of occurrence only because their names might not have been
noted by the doctors or in the medical registers of the places to which the
deceased was taken for treatment, calls for an illogical inference which the
High Court did not and indeed could not draw.
15. Similarly, no inference of PW-1's and PW-2's absence
from the scene of the crime can be drawn merely because the police officers
did not see PW-1 and PW-2 when they went to Kaithal and Chandigarh.
16. The first challenge of the appellant regarding the
credibility of the eye witnesses' account is, therefore, unsustainable and is
rejected.
17. The claim of the appellant that the death of Arjun
Singh could have been caused for reasons other than the bullet injury is
equally unsustainable. The appellant sought to rely upon the evidence of Dr.
Sushil Budhiraja, Senior Resident, PGI, Chandigarh that Arjun Singh was a
diabetic and, "......In this case blood had been infected. There were
four causes of the death in the present case i.e. renal failure, septicaemia,
DIC and respiratory failure. ARF is an abbreviation of acute renal failure.
ATN is abbreviation of acute tubular necrosis. It also denotes acute renal
failure". On re-examination, PW-17 clarified, "the complication of
renal failure, septicaemia, DIC and respiratory failure developed because of
the injury received by Arjun Singh and consequent operation."
18. Furthermore, the evidence of Dr. Dalbir Singh who
conducted the postmortem examination of Arjun Singh (PW-4) was that four
injuries had been caused to the body of the deceased, of which injures Nos.
1, 3 and 5 could be caused by a fire arm. He also opined that "......the
cause of death was due to shock due to septicaemia following peritonitis due
to injuries to the large gut, liver and intervening structures". PW-4
also stated that the bullet wound on the chest, if left untreated, was
sufficient to have caused death in the ordinary course of nature.
19. The evidence thus clearly shows that peritonitis,
renal failure, septicaemia etc. were directly relatable to the bullet injury.
The Trial Court's conclusion that the death was caused by a shot fired from
the revolver of the appellant is in keeping with the evidence on record.
Significantly, the plea does not appear to have been raised before the High
Court at all.
20. In our view, the appellant has been unable to point
out any error of law or any perversity which would justify this Court in
upsetting the concurrent finding as to the guilt of the appellant under
Section 302 IPC. However, the enhancement of the fine by the High Court from
Rs, 2,000\- to Rs. 10,000\- on the revision application of PW-1 is
unsupported by any reason. For the reasons stated above, we dismiss the
appeal but set aside the enhancement of the fine and restore the fine of Rs.
2,000\- as originally imposed by the Trial Court.
Appeal dismissed.
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