SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
Nandu Rastogi @ Nandji Rastogi
Vs.
State of Bihar
Crl.A.No.1299-1300 of 2001
(N. Santosh Hegde and B.P. Singh JJ.)
01.10.2002
JUDGMENT
B.P. Singh, J.
The appellants in these appeals, namely, Nandu Rastogi @ Nandji Rastogi and Bal
Mukund Rastogi are brothers. They alongwith one Jagdish Chamar and Mohan Singh
were put up for
trial before the 2nd Additional Sessions Judge, Rohtas at Sasaram, who found
the appellants and Jagdish Chamar guilty of the offence under Section 302/34
IPC and under Section 27 of the Arms Act but acquitted Mohan Singh. They were
sentenced to undergo imprisonment for life under Section 302/34 IPC and to
undergo rigorous imprisonment for one year under Section 27 of the Arms Act.
They preferred three appeals before the High Court but by a
common judgment and order, the High Court dismissed the appeals and affirmed
their conviction and sentence. Three special leave petitions were preferred
before this Court but since Jagdish Chamar did not surrender to his sentence,
his special leave petition was dismissed by order dated 3rd December, 2001
while special leave to appeal was granted to the appellants herein.
2. The informant Shyam Mohan Rastogi, PW.4 is the uncle of the appellants being
the cousin of their father. The deceased Shankar Rastogi was the son of the
informant PW.4. It is alleged that in an occurrence which took place at about
7.00 p.m. on 12.11.1985 he was shot dead by appellant Nandu Rastogi. It is the case
of the prosecution that the three accused, alongwith two unknown persons, came
armed with country made pistols and perpetrated the crime. According to the
prosecution the background in which this occurrence took place, and which also discloses
the motive for the offence, is that the informant PW.4 owned a house which he
sold to one Braj Kishore Rastogi, who in turn sold the said house to appellant
Nandji Rastogi. Manjoor Ansari, PW.1 was the tenant of a shop in that building,
but Nandji
Rastogi was pressurising him to vacate the premises. Shankar, (deceased) son of
the informant, took the side of Manjoor Ansari and declared that he will not
permit Nandji Rastogi to forcibly evict him. He even threatened that he may
challenge the sale of the house by his father since his father had no legal authority
to sell his share in the house. It appears from the evidence on record that
Manjoor Ansari is on good terms with the informant and his
family members and continued to occupy the shop premises even on the date of
occurrence.
3. The case of the prosecution as disclosed in the First Information Report
lodged by PW.4 at 8.00 p.m. on 12th November, 1985, soon after the
occurrence, is that at about 5.00 p.m. the informant was sitting in his shop,
namely, Shankar Stores, alongwith his tenant Ayodhya Tiwari, PW.5 when Nandji
Rastogi came there and warned the informant to caution his son that he should
not interfere in his matters. He threatened that if he did not do so his son
may be killed. So saying, he went away threatening the informant with dire
consequences. At about 6.45 p.m. electricity supply was cut off when he was
sitting in his shop alongwith one Shambhu Lal, his son Mukund, Manjoor Ansari, PW.1
and Shankar Rastogi (deceased) his son. Since it was the diwali day, candles
and earthen lamps were lit in his shop and
elsewhere. 15 minutes later appellant Nandji alongwith his brother appellant
Bal Mukund Rastogi, accused Jagdish Chamar and two other unknown persons
entered his shop armed with country made pistols. Nandji and Jagdish caught
hold of his son and took him
inside to the residential apartment which is just behind the shop, at gun
point. When the informant and others wanted to intervene, they were prevented
by appellant Bal Mukund Rastogi and his companion who stood guard with country
made pistols in their hands. They threatened them to keep quiet. After Shankar
Rastogi was taken inside the house by Nandji Rastogi, Jagdish Chamar and one
other unknown person, he heard the report of gun fire followed by crying of
women inside the house. An alarm was raised and the accused fled away
threatening them. When he went inside he found his son bleeding and
unconscious. People who had gathered there, took the deceased to Kudra Hospital
where he was declared
dead.
4. After investigation four persons were put up for trial including the
appellants, Jagdish Chamar and one Mohan Singh, who was acquitted by the trial
court. The defence of the appellants was that no such incident as alleged took
place and that they had been falsely implicated on account of some dispute over
a common wall. Suggestions were put to some of the witnesses that a dacoity took
place in the house of the deceased and in the course of that
dacoity the deceased was shot dead.
5. PWs. 1 to 5 are the witnesses examined by the prosecution to prove its case.
PW.6 Dr. Shyam Sunder Singh is the doctor who performed the post-mortem
examination on the body of the deceased at 10.00 a.m. on 13th November, 1985.
The post mortem report and his evidence leaves no manner of doubt that Shankar Rastogi
met a homicidal death. This was not even challenged by the appellants. PW. 7 is
the investigating officer.
6. PW.1 Manjoor Ansari deposed that he was sitting with Shambhu Lal, his son
Mukund Lal, Shankar (deceased) and the informant in the shop of the informant
when 4-5 persons came
armed with country made pistols. He identified the appellants and Jagdish
Chamar. Nandji Rastogi, Jagdish Chamar and one unknown accused took Shankar to
the residential portion of the premises from the shop where he was sitting. The
residence of the informant is behind the shop in the same building. The
remaining two persons, namely Bal Mukund Rastogi and one unknown accused
prevented them from intervening in the matter. Soon thereafter he heard the
sound of gun fire and thereafter the accused fled. Kamla Rastogi, PW.2, mother
of deceased Shankar, and wife of the informant, came out and informed them that
Nandji had shot dead her son. This witness claims to have gone inside the house
and seen Shankar lying injured. He was removed to the hospital where he was
declared dead.
7. Kamla Rastogi, PW.2 is the mother of the deceased. She has stated that she
was in the kitchen when her grand son aged about 10-11 years, came and told her
that dacoits had entered the shop. She rushed towards the shop but on the way
she saw Nandu and Jagdish holding her son, while one unknown person was
standing behind them. Nandu fired from his pistol injuring Shankar who fell
down on the spot. She thereafter came out, met her husband
and informed him, but prevented him from going inside on account of fear. She
also met, Manjoor Ansari, Shambhu Lal and his son Mukund Lal etc. from whom she
learnt that they were prevented from going inside by appellant Bal Mukund
Rastogi and another person.
8. Mrityunjay Singh, PW.3 deposed that he was having tea at a tea stall nearby
when the lights went off. Soon thereafter he heard the report of gun fire and
rushed towards the house of the informant. He saw 5 persons coming out of the
house of the informant armed with country made pistols. Out of them, he identified
the appellants and Jagdish Chamar.
9. Shyam Mohan Rastogi, informant, in his deposition fully supported the facts
mentioned by him in the First Information Report. He further stated that while
he was trying to enter his
house he was hit by an unknown accused on his head with the butt of the pistol.
He further stated that Ayodhya Tiwari, PW.5 and Mrityunjay Singh, PW.3 came
soon after the incident. He also informed the Court that Shambu Lal and his son
Mukund Lal were not willing to depose as witnesses in the case.
10. The last important witness Ayodhya Tiwari, PW.5 deposed about the incident
which took place at 5.00 p.m. in which Nandji Rastogi had threatened the
informant warning him to caution his son, the deceased. At the time when the firing
took place he was in his room. He resided in the house of the informant. When
he heard the report of gun fire he wanted to come out of the house, but on
seeing 5 persons coming out and running away, he did not
stir out of his room immediately. Later he came out and was told by Mrityunjay
Singh, PW.3, the wife of Manjoor, and the parents of the deceased about the
occurrence. He had identified the appellants and Jagdish Chamar.
11. Though the trial court and the High Court have undertaken a critical scrutiny
of the evidence on record, with the help of counsel for the parties, we have
also read the entire evidence. There is hardly anything in the
cross-examination of the witnesses which may cast a doubt on the truthfulness
of their testimony. Their credibility has not been impeached. They are natural
witnesses and have deposed in a forthright manner. There is no reason for us
to interfere with the findings recorded by the trial court and the High Court.
12. Mr. P.S. Mishra, Senior Advocate, appearing for the appellants submitted
that the grand child of the informant, who first came and reported to his grand
mother Kamla Rastogi that dacoits had entered the shop was not examined by the
prosecution. In our view the failure of the prosecution to examine the grand child
of the informant does not in any manner adversely affect the prosecution case,
particularly when large number of witnesses who are found to be reliable have
supported the case of the prosecution. The fact that the accused had reasons to
be unhappy with the conduct of the deceased and his father, cannot be disputed,
and in fact, earlier in the evening Nandji Rastogi had administered a warning
to the informant in the presence of Ayodhya Tiwari, P.W.5. The First
Information Report was lodged promptly at 8.00 p.m. on the same day and there
was, therefore, no opportunity for the prosecution to concoct a false case. The
deceased was shot dead in the residential apartment which was just behind the
shop where male members of the family were sitting. The actual killing was
witnessed by the mother of the deceased, PW.2, which is only natural because
she was inside the house preparing sweets to celebrate the Diwali festival. The
evidence on record, therefore, leaves no room for doubt that relations between
appellants on the one hand and the informant and his son on the other were
strained. On the date of occurrence the appellants alongwith Jagdish Chamar and
two unknown persons came to the shop of the informant and while Bal Mukund
Rastogi and one unknown accused prevented the informant and others from
intervening by threatening them with pistols, Nandu Rastogi, Jagdish Chamar and
the other unknown accused took Shankar Rastogi to the residential apartment,
just behind the shop, where he was shot dead by Nandu Rastogi which was
witnessed by Kamla Rastogi, PW.2, the mother of the deceased.
13. Learned counsel for the appellants could not persuade us to accept the case
of the defence that no such occurrence took place and that Shankar Rastogi was
killed in the course of dacoity. There is no evidence whatsoever to support the
defence case which must be rejected.
14. He then submitted that in any event so far as Bal
Mukund Rastogi is concerned, there is no allegation that he took part in the assault.
He submitted that his false implication cannot be ruled out. In any event it is
submitted that his conviction with the aid of Section 34 IPC is not justified
in the facts and circumstances of the case. He relied upon two decisions of
this Court in Parshuram Singh vs. State of Bihar1 and
Suresh and another vs. State of U.P.2. These decisions do not
help the defence. In Parshuram Singh (supra) this Court gave to two of the
accused persons the benefit of doubt having regard to the peculiar facts and
circumstances of that case. Against one of the accused in that case the
allegation was that he exhorted the others to kill the deceased, and though he
himself was armed with lathi, he did not take any part in the assault. The
Court found that the surrounding circumstances of the case did not ensure the confidence
that he made such an exhortation. Apart from not using the weapon, which was
handy with him, there appeared no reason for him to take up the leadership of
the gang as he had no quarrel with the deceased. As regards the other accused
to whom the benefit of doubt was extended, the Court found that it was highly improbable
that he would have refrained from using the inherently lethal weapon like the
pistol which was in his possession if he shared the common intention. In our
view the decision in Parshuram Singh's case rests on its own peculiar facts and
no principle of law can be culled from that decision which may be of any
assistance to the appellants in this case.
15. Shri P.S. Mishra then drew our attention to paragraph 23 of the judgment in
Suresh vs. State of U.P. (supra) wherein it has been observed that to attract
Section 34 IPC two postulates are indispensable : (1) The criminal act
(consisting of a series of acts) should have been done, not by one person, but
more than one person. (2) Doing of every such individual act cumulatively resulting
in the commission of criminal offence should have been in furtherance of the
common intention of all such persons. He also drew our attention to the
discussion in the judgment about the difference between a "common
intention" and "similar intention".
16. It has been observed by this Court that to attract the applicability of Section 34 of the Code the prosecution is under an obligation to establish that there existed a common intention which requires a pre-arranged plan, because before a man can be vicariously convicted for the criminal act of another, the act must have been done in furtherance of the common intention. The Court observed:
"Section
34 of the Indian Penal Code recognizes the principle of vicarious liability in
criminal jurisprudence. It makes a person liable for action of an offence not
committed by him but by another person with whom he shared the common
intention. It is a rule of evidence and does not create a substantive offence.
The section gives statutory recognition to the commonsense principle that if more
than two persons intentionally do a thing jointly, it is just the same as if
each of them had done it individually. There is no gainsaying that a common
intention presupposes prior concert, which requires a prearranged plan of the
accused participating in an offence. Such preconcert or preplanning may develop
on the spot or during the course of commission of the offence but the crucial test
is that such plan must precede the act constituting an offence. Common
intention can be formed previously or in the course of occurrence and on the
spur of the moment. The existence of a common intention is a question of fact
in each case to be proved mainly as a matter of inference from
the circumstances of the case."
17. In the facts of the case the Court found that Pavitri Devi, accused No.3 could not be held guilty of the offence of murder with the aid of Section 34 since she was merely standing on the road when the incident happened. Her mere presence without doing anything more, without even carrying a weapon, and without even marching along with the other assailants, did not attract Section 34 IPC.
18. The facts of this case are quite different.
Appellants alongwith three others came armed with country made pistols. They
came together, and while two of them stood guard and prevented the prosecution
witnesses from intervening, three of them took the deceased inside and one of
them shot him dead. Thereafter they fled together. To attract Section 34 IPC it
is not necessary that each one of the accused must assault the deceased. It is
enough if it is shown that they shared a common intention to commit the offence
and in furtherance thereof each one played his assigned role by doing separate
acts, similar or diverse. The facts of this case are eloquent and the role
played by Bal Mukund Rastogi of preventing the prosecution witnesses from going
to the rescue of the deceased was the role played by him with a view to
achieve the ultimate objective of killing Shankar Rastogi. We, therefore,
entertain no doubt that all the five persons who came to the shop of the
informant had a common intention to commit the murder of Shankar Rastogi and
they acted pursuant to a prearranged plan. The facts clearly are consistent
only with the hypothesis of their acting in furtherance of a common intention.
They have, therefore, rightly been convicted with the aid of Section 34 IPC.
19. We, therefore, find no merit in these appeals which are dismissed.
1JT 2002(1) SC 407
2(2001) 3 SCC 673