SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
Narain
Vs.
State of Madhya Pradesh
Crl.A.Nos.1177 of 1997
(Doraiswamy Raju and Arijit Pasayat JJ.)
04.02.2004
ORDER
Arijit Pasayat, J.
1. Appellant-Narain (hereinafter referred to as 'the accused') questions
legality of judgment rendered by a Division Bench of the Madhya Pradesh High
Court. which held his conviction for offence punishable under Section 304 Part
I of the Indian Penal Code, 1860 (in short 'the IPC') to be in order.
Consequentially, sentence of eight years rigorous imprisonment and fine
proposed were affirmed.
2. Eight persons faced trial including the appellant for alleged commission of
offences punishable under Sections 148, 302/149, 307/149, 324/149, 323/149 and
450 IPC. The Trial Court held that the accusations were not established.
Against rest of the seven while it was established only in respect of appellant
relating to the offence for which he has been found guilty. the
accused-appellant was made to undergo imprisonment for 8 years and to pay a
fine of Rs. 5000/- with default stipulation. The order of conviction was
questioned by the appellant before the High Court. The State also questioned
the legality of the acquittal as directed for rest of the accused. A revision
application was filed by the father of the Makhan (hereinafter referred to as
"the deceased") with similar prayers as that of the State.
3. The prosecution story in brief is as follows:
“On 24.2.1986 at about 6.30 a.m. at village Murachh, the informant Halke, alias
Laxman (PW-14) had gone to call his labourers who were under a Pipal tree. The
accused persons armed with Farsa, ballam, etc. came there and surrounded him.
Accused-appellant Narain Singh incited the others to assault him and exhorted
that he should not be permitted to escape and should be done to death.
Thereafter Narain Singh assaulted Laxman (PW-14) with a Farsa on his head.
Tijji bai (PW-6) came on the spot to save Halke, but she was also assaulted.
Thereafter, the accused persons chased the deceased Makhan and assaulted him
with Farsa, axe and sticks near the house of Sukka Baniya (DW-2). Parvati Bai
(PW-10), Siya Bai (PW-13), Kanchhi Bai and Lalla Bai and Khilan Singh (PW-4)
came to the spot in order to save Halke, but they were also assaulted. Siya Bai
(PW-13) and others took deceased Makhan inside the house of Sukka (DW-2) in
order to save him, but the accused persons entered the house and assaulted
Makhan there also. The report of the incident was lodged on the same day at
11.00 a.m. by Laxman Singh (PW-14), which was recorded as Dehati Nalsi (First
information report). On the basis of said report, investigation was undertaken
and the accused persons were arrested.”
4. The accused persons pleaded innocence and also took definite stand that on
account of enmity and rivalry prosecution witnesses who claimed to be the
eyewitnesses and to have sustained injuries assaulted the accused persons and
in any event they have acted in exercise of right of private defence. They also
stated that true genesis of the occurrence has been suppressed and the
occurrence did not take place at the places indicated by the prosecution.
5. The Trial Court found that the prosecution has not really come out with
actual scenario. According to prosecution the occurrence took place at 3
different places. But the evidence was to the contrary. The occurrence took
place at a place different from where it was claimed by the prosecution. It
also found unexplained discrepancies in the evidence of all the prosecution
witnesses and, therefore, held that seven out of the eight accused persons were
not guilty. So far as the appellant is concerned, it was held that though the
evidence on record indicates that assaults were made by the deceased and some
of the prosecution witnesses, on whom, yet the deceased had exceeded his right
of private defence, even though the same may have been available to him at some
point of time. The High Court confirmed the conclusions and affirmed the
conviction and sentence. It dismissed, by a common judgment appeal of the State
and revision filed by father of the deceased.
6. In support of the appeal, learning counsel for the appellant submitted that
substratum of prosecution version has been corroded. The Trial Court and the
High Court were not justified in convicting the appellant, on the self same
evidence which was found to be totally unreliable for seven co-accused persons.
7. In response, learned counsel for the State submitted that though part of the
evidence has been discarded, the residue was sufficient to convict the accused.
It was pointed out that the places of occurrence as claimed by the prosecution
were really not at a great distance from the place where the occurrence took
place according to the Trial Court and the High Court. When the
accused-appellant himself took the plea of right of private defence, the courts
below were justified in convicting him.
8. As a rule of universal application it cannot be said that when a portion of
the prosecution evidence is discarded as unworthy of credence, there cannot be
any conviction. It is always open to the Court to differentiate between an
accused who has been convicted and those who have been acquitted. (See
Guru Charan Singh and Another v. State of Punjab ) and Sucha Singh and
Another v. State of Punjab ( ). The maxim "Falsus in uno falsus in
omnibus" is merely a rule of caution. As has been indicated by this
Court in Sucha Singh's case (supra), in terms of felicitous metaphor, an
attempt has to be made to separate grain from the chaff, truth from falsehood,
when the prosecution is able to establish its case by acceptable evidence,
though in part, the accused can be convicted even if the co-accused have been
acquitted on the ground that the evidence led was not sufficient to fasten
guilt on them. But where the position is such that the evidence is totally
unreliable, and it will be impossible to separate truth from falsehood to an
extent that they are inextricably mixed up, and in the process of separation an
absolute new case has to be reconstructed by divorcing essential details
presented by the prosecution completely from the context and background against
which they are made, conviction cannot be made.
9. In the case at hand it is noticed that the Trial Court analysed the factual
position in great detail. According to the prosecution the incident took place
at three different places' i.e. first under the Pipal tree where the informant
(PW-14) Laxman Singh @ Halka had gone to call his labourers, then on the road
in front of the house of Sukha Baniya (DW-2), and thereafter inside the house
of (DW-2) where the deceased was taken in order to save him from the assaults.
Apart from the alleged first information report, the statement purported to be
a dying declaration of PW-14 was recorded by the Nayab Tehsildar and Executive
Magistrate (DW-1). In this statement (Exb. P/18) he had stated that while he
was sitting along with family members incident took place. But in the first
information report, he had stated that he had gone to call the labourers
whereupon accused persons came there and assaulted him and others. The Trial
Court found that the informant was not a reliable witness. because he even
denied to have given the dying declaration, when it was established by the
statement of PW-1 that the statement was recorded by him. Injured witnesses
Tijji Bai (PW-6), Parvati Bai (PW-10), Siya Bai (PW-13), and Khilan Singh
(PW-4) who claimed to be eyewitnesses had given varying versions and their
evidence was found unacceptable about the actual occurrence. Their statements
in Court were at great variance from what they had stated during investigation.
It was noticed by the Trial Court that from the evidence of the informant
(PW-14) it was clear that he had seen actual assault on the deceased. The
evidence of so-called eyewitnesses as to where the assaults were made on the
body of the deceased was found also to be discrepant and not consistent. One of
the prosecution witnesses who claimed to be an eyewitness i.e. (PW-13) admitted
in cross-examination that deceased had first assaulted the appellant with lathi
on his head. The Trial Court found this to be of significant, but said that
though it was probable that the appellant had acted in relations, the plea of
right of private defence was not acceptable. These findings were confirmed by
the High Court.
10. In view of the findings, the inevitable conclusion is that prosecution has
not established its accusations against any of the accused persons including
the appellant. It is significant to note that the Trial Court itself observed
that the deceased and others assaulted the appellant and he may have acted in
retaliation.
11. The genesis of the incident, the place of incident and the manner in which
the incident took place was found not to have been established by cogent and
credible prosecution evidence. Therefore, on the peculiar facts of the case and
the nature of evidence tendered by the prosecution there is no scope for taking
a different view so far as the appellant is concerned and treat the case
against him alone to have been substantiated beyond reasonable doubt. The
conclusion arrived at in respect of other accused persons were equally
applicable so far as the appellant is concerned.
12. That being the position, we set aside the conviction as recorded by the
Trial Court and affirmed by the High Court. The appeal is allowed. The bail
bonds of the appellant be cancelled.