SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
Mangu Khan
Vs
State of Rajasthan
Appeal (Crl.) 30 of 2004, Criminal Appeal No. 31 of 2004
(K. G. Balakrishnan and B. N. Srikrishna)
24.02.2005
JUDGMENT
B.N.SRIKRISHNA, J.
The appellants were convicted under Section 148, Section 302/149 and Section
323/149 of the Indian Penal Code by the Trial Court and sentences were awarded
to them consequently. Having failed in their appeals before the High Court, the
appellants are before this Court by way of special leave.
Facts: Sahab Khan, PW 3, made a written report (Ex. P 6) on 11.7.1997 at 9:00
a.m. in Police Station Sadar, Alwar. According to him, between 7:00 and 7:30
a.m. on that day, he and his father, Dhandhad, and his brother, Isab, went to
their field. Mangu Khan, Appellant No. 1, Sirdar Khan, Appellant No. 2, Subedar
Khan, Appellant No. 3, (Deen Mohd. and Jamil Khan, since acquitted), who had
enmity against them on account of construction of a bund, were sitting on the
bund duly armed with lathi, farsi, tanchia and kattas. As soon as the
informant, his father and brother approached, all the aforesaid persons
attacked them with farsi, lathi and tanchia. Consequently, Dhandhad and his
brother, Isab, fell down and died on the spot itself. He also sustained some
injuries as a result of the assault.
The Police Station, Sadar, Alwar registered a case under Sections 147, 148,
149, 307, 447 and 302 IPC and commenced investigation. As a result of the
investigation, five of the accused were tried. They comprised Mangu Khan,
Appellant No. 1, Sirdar Khan, Appellant No. 2, Subedar Khan, Appellant No. 3,
Deen Mohd. and Jamil Khan. Learned Additional District and Session Judge, Alwar
convicted the said accused under Sections 148, 302/149 and 323/149 of I.P.C.
and sentenced them to suffer two years rigorous imprisonment and a fine of
rupees one thousand in default for the offence under Section 148, rigorous
imprisonment for life and a fine of rupees five thousand with default sentence
of two years rigorous imprisonment for the offence under Section 302/149 IPC,
and to suffer one year rigorous imprisonment for the offence under Section
323/149 IPC.
All the five accused appealed to the High Court. On appeal the High Court was
of the view that the charges under Sections 148, 302/149 and 323/149 IPC
against the appellants, Deen Mohd. and Jamil Khan had not been established
beyond reasonable doubt and acquitted them. The present Appellants Nos. 1 to 3
were, however, convicted by the High Court under Section 302 read with Section
34 IPC and sentenced to suffer imprisonment for life and fine of rupees five
thousand with a default sentence of two years rigorous imprisonment and one
year's rigorous imprisonment for the conviction under Section 323/34 IPC. The
sentences were directed to run concurrently.
The learned counsel for the appellant invited us to go into the minute details
of the evidence to persuade us that the evidence before the Court could not
have been accepted at all for convicting the appellants. He also tried to
highlight some discrepancies and inconsistencies in the evidence. Two courts
having concurrently accepted the evidence to sustain the charge, we decline to
go into the meticulous analysis of the evidence at the invitation of the learned
counsel for the appellants. We may usefully recapitulate in this connection the
dicta of this Court in Harshadsingh Pahelvansingh Thakore v. The State of
Gujarat.
"Judicial summitry, when the subject of dispute is reappraisal of
evidence even on the sophisticated ground of misappreciation, has to submit
itself to certain self- restraining rules of processual symmetry. The trial
court directly sees the witnesses testify and tests their veracity in the raw.
The appellate Court, enjoying coextensive power of examination, exercises it
circumspectly, looks for errors of probative appraisal, oversight or omission
in the record and makes a better judgment on the totality of materials in the
light of established rules of criminal jurisprudence.
As the case ascends higher, forensic review is more rarefied. Such being the
restrictive approach, the Supreme Court cannot be persuaded, without
stultifying the system of our judicature, to go over the ground of reading the
evidence and interpreting it a new so as to uphold that which appeals to it
among possible alternative views. If there is perversity, miscarriage of
justice, shocking misreading or gross misapplication of the rules, procedural
and substantive, we interfere without hesitation. Of course other exceptional
circumstances also may invoke our review jurisdiction.
These prefatory observations have become necessary since, usually, appellants,
hopefully slurring over these jurisdictional limitations, argue the whole way
before us as if the entire evidence is at large for de novo examination. Such a
procedure has been attempted in the present case and, for reasons just
mentioned, we are disinclined to rip open the depositions to rediscover whether
the evidence is reliable or not." *
In Paragraph 31 of the judgment under appeal the High Court has summarized its
findings as under:
"31. Bearing the principles propounded in the aforequotted judgments,
in mind we now propose to consider the facts situation emerged in the instant
case that may be summarized as under:-
(i) Deceased Isab received 7 incised wound in the head and other parts of his
body and 3 abrasions over right hand and right thigh.
(ii) Deceased Dhandhad received 9 incised wounds on the head and other parts of
the body and two bruises on the skull.
(iii) Appellant Mangu received four abrasions on both the hands and nose.
Whereas appellant Sirdar sustained 1 lacerated wound on right leg, multiple
abraded bruises on right shoulder and two abrasions on left knee.
(iv) The informant Sahab Khan sustained 1 lacerated wound on head, bruises on
left shoulder and right wrist and abrasion on left leg.
(v) Dispute regarding dividing wall of the fields was going on for the last
10-12 days prior to the date of incident between the appellant Mangu and
deceased.
(vi) According to site plan (Dhani) place of residence of the deceased situated
towards the field of Mangu about 300 meters away from the place of incident.
(vii) Dead bodies of Isab and Dhandhad were found lying in the field of Mangu.
(viii) The field of informant Sahab Khan situated just adjacent to the field of
Mangu towards its south.
(ix) The statement of Zakir Hussain (Pw.1), Rudar (Pw.2), Sharif Khan (Pw.4)
and Riyasat Ali (Pw. 5) were recorded by the police on July 14, 1997 i.e. after
about 3 days of the incident. As according to Narpat Singh Rathore, I.O. (Pw.
15) they were not available to him.
(x) To the cross examination Narpat Singh Rathore, I.O. admitted that farsi
recovered at the instance of appellant Jamil was sealed and marked as Article
1-A. A slip was pasted on the article which bore his signatures and date July
11, 1997, but it did not bear the signatures of Jamil. He further stated that
Jamil was arrested on July 12, 1997 and farsi got recovered after his arrest.
(xi) There are omissions, embellishments and contradictions in the statement of
Sahab Khan (Pw.3).
(xii) The injuries sustained by appellants Mangu and Sirdar Khan had not been
explained by prosecution.
(xiii) Despite the Police Station fall on the way while taking the dead bodies.
The informant did not give first information to the police." *
These findings are broadly correct and must be taken as the basis for any
further critical appraisal of the judgment under appeal.
Contentions:
The first contention urged by the learned counsel is that Mangu Khan and Sirdar
Khan had also suffered injuries, which had not been explained by the
prosecution. Consequently, it is argued that the whole of the prosecution case
becomes suspect and induces a reasonable doubt, the benefit of which must
legitimately go to the accused.
The injuries sustained by the deceased Isab and Dhandhad were extremely serious
ones on vital parts of the body, which resulted in their death. The informant
Sahab Khan had suffered a lacerated wound on the right side of his head and
three abrasions on his right wrist and left leg respectively. As far as the
injuries sustained by the accused persons are concerned, the injury report
shows small abrasions and laceration on non- vital parts of the body. Apart
therefrom, we are unable to accept the contention that in every case there is
such an inexorable burden upon the prosecution to explain the injuries on the
body of the accused failing which the prosecution case must be thrown out lock,
stock and barrel.
In Hare Krishna Singh and Ors. v. State of Bihar this Court, after careful
analysis of several judgments cited before it as authorities for the said
proposition, observed as under: (vide paragraph 18)
"The burden of proving the guilt of the accused is undoubtedly on the
prosecution. The accused is not bound to say anything in defence. The
prosecution has to prove the guilt of the accused beyond all reasonable doubts.
If the witnesses examined on behalf of the prosecution are believed by the
Court in proof of the guilt of the accused beyond any reasonable doubt, the
question of the obligation of the prosecution to explain the injuries sustained
by the accused will not arise.
When the prosecution comes with a definite case that the offence has been
committed by the accused and proves its case beyond any reasonable doubt, it
becomes hardly necessary for the prosecution to again explain how and in what
circumstances injuries have been inflicted on the person of the accused."*
Again, thus in paragraph 20:
"All the decisions of this Court which have been referred to and discussed above, show that when the Court has believed the prosecution witnesses as convincing and trustworthy, the Court overruled the contention of the accused that as the prosecution had failed to explain the injuries sustained by the accused in the same occurrence, the prosecution case should be disbelieved and the accused should be acquitted. Thus, it is not the law or invariable rule that whenever the accused sustains an injury in the same occurrence, the prosecution has to explain the injuries failure of which will mean that the prosecution has suppressed the truth and also the origin and genesis of the occurrence." *
In the face of this authoritative pronouncement, we are unable to accept the
contention that merely because the appellants, Mangu Khan and Sirdar Khan had a
few abrasions and minor lacerated wounds on their bodies, the evidence which is
otherwise acceptable becomes suspect or that the prosecution must fail on that
score.
The learned counsel next contended that the High Court had grossly erred in not
appreciating that the ocular evidence on record was wholly inconsistent with
and inexplicable in the light of the medical evidence. In particular, learned
counsel drew our attention to the post mortem reports in both the cases. In the
case of deceased Isab, the post mortem report dated 11.7.1997 indicated that
the body was examined at 12.00 Noon on 11.7.97 and certified that death had
occurred "within 24 hours prior to PM Examination".
The cause of death appeared to be serious injuries caused on the head and skull
resulting in wounds going deep into meninges, brain matter coming out through
bones and scalp. In the case of the deceased Dandhad, the post mortem report
dated 11.7.1997 certified that his body was examined at 11.00 AM and death had
occurred "within 24 hours prior to PM Examination". In both the
cases, the post mortem report indicated "rigor mortis present all over the
body". On the basis of these two documents, the learned counsel tried to
build up a case that the prosecution story was unbelievable, that the offence
had been committed during previous night in the open field by unknown persons
and the case had been falsely foisted on the accused on account of previous
enmity over the construction of a bund.
We see no basis whatsoever for this argument. In the first place, neither post
mortem report suggests that the death had taken place exactly 24 hours before
the post mortem was conducted. All that the post mortem reports say is that the
death had occurred "within 24 hours prior to PM Examination".
Undoubtedly, the post mortem examination was carried out at 11.00 A.M./12 Noon
on 11.7.1997. In other words, the post mortem reports suggest that the death
might have occurred any time after 11.00/12.00 Noon of 10.7.1997.The contention
urged by reference to text books on Forensic Medicine to show the time within
which rigor mortis develops all over the body also has no factual basis. It
depends on various factors such as constitution of the deceased, season of the
year, the temperature in the region and the conditions under which the body has
been preserved.
The record indicates that the body was taken from the mortuary. We notice that
there is no cross examination, whatsoever, of the doctor so as to elicit any of
the material facts on which a possible argument could have been based. If these
are the circumstances, then the presence of rigor mortis all over the body by
itself cannot warrant the argument of the learned counsel that the death must
have occurred during the previous night. Acceptable ocular evidence cannot be
dislodged on such hypothetical bases for which no proper grounds were laid.
The learned counsel then argued that the evidence on record showed that the
bund had been constructed in the field of Mangu Khan about 10-15 days prior to
the date of the incident. He urged that even if it was assumed that the bund
had been constructed by trespassing upon the land of the deceased, since the
accused were in settled possession and the complainant party were attempting to
forcibly reoccupy the bund, right of private defence was available to the
accused both in respect of their property and their person. The contention is
wholly unfounded and misplaced. No such plea seems to have been raised during
the trial, nor suggested during the cross examination of prosecution witnesses.
Secondly, there is no evidence that the complainant party was approaching the
accused party with an intention of causing a bodily harm, for they were wholly
unarmed. It is the accused party which appeared to be armed with weapons like
lathi, farsi, tanchia and katta. Further, the evidence on record does not
suggest that any member of the complainant party had done any act which could
have induced a reasonable apprehension in the minds of the accused of danger to
their person or to their property. We are also not in a position to accept the
contention of the learned counsel that the injuries sustained by the accused
furnished such evidence.
The learned counsel then contended that, apart from the other charges of the
five accused, the accused who had been charged under Section 302 simplicitor
had been acquitted of the offence under Section 302, but convicted of the
offence under Section 302 r/w Section 34 of IPC.
According to the learned counsel, since the Sessions Court had acquitted the
appellants of the charge under Section 302, it was not open to the High Court
to convict them under Section 302 r/w Section 34 of IPC. This, in the
submission of the learned counsel caused prejudice to the appellants, is a
grave misdirection in law and has resulted in miscarriage of justice.
The High Court, after reappreciating the evidence on record, took the view that
the prosecution had failed to establish charges under Sections 148, 302/149 and
323/149 IPC against the accused Deen Mohd. and Jamil Khan beyond reasonable
doubt. This was the reason why they were acquitted. With regard to the present
Appellants Nos. 1 to 3, the High Court was of the view that formation of the
common intention to commit the offence on the spot was established against
them. Relying on the judgment of this Court in Malhu Yadav and Ors. v. State of
Bihar the High Court held that although a charge under Section 34 IPC had not
been framed against the present appellants, since the evidence showed formation
of a common intention to commit the offence on the spot, their conviction under
Section 302 IPC with the aid of Section 34 IPC would not cause any prejudice to
them.
The contention urged by the learned counsel is unsound in law. There is no
doubt that Isab and Dhandhad were done to death by serious injuries to the
vital parts of their bodies, namely, skull. That the three appellants had a
common intention to cause such injuries is evident from their waiting with
arms, early in the morning, in the field. The evidence on record justifies the
conclusion of the High Court. The manner in which the complainant party was
attacked and two of them were done to death is born out by the evidence and the
High Court's findings on this issue are justified. May be, from the evidence,
it may not be possible to pin point the person who dealt the fatal blow to each
of the deceased. That is perhaps the reason why the appellants were all acquitted
of the charge under Section 302 simplicitor. But when the evidence indicates
that the three accused had repeatedly given blows with lathi, farsi and
tanchia, and it is not possible to identify and ascribe a particular injury to
a particular accused, there would be nothing illegal in convicting the accused
of the charge of Section 302 with the aid of Section 34 IPC. As to the object
of Section 34, this Court in B.M. Dana and Anr. v. State of Bombay observed:
"We accept the position that we do not know which particular person or
persons gave the fatal blows; but once it is found that a criminal act was done
in furtherance of the common intention of all, each of such persons is liable
for the criminal act as if it were done by him alone. The section is intended
to meet a case in which it may be difficult to distinguish between the acts of
individual members of a party who act in furtherance of the common intention of
all or to prove exactly what part was taken by each of them.
The principle which the section embodies is participation in some action with
the common intention of committing a crime; once such participation is
established, S. 34 is at once attracted." *
In fact, this precisely appears to be the role of Section 34, as this Court had
indicated in Harshadsingh Pahelvansingh Thakore (supra). In the felicitous
words of Krishna Iyer, J. the legal proposition is:
"We make the legal position clear that when a murderous assault by many
hands with many knives has ended fatally, it is legally impermissible to
dissect the serious ones from the others and seek to salvage those whose stabs
have not proved fatal. When people play with knives and lives, the circumstance
that one man's stab falls on a less or more vulnerable part of the person of
the victim is of no consequence to fix the guilt for murder. Conjoint
complicity is the inevitable inference when a gory group animated by lethal
intent accomplish their purpose cumulatively. Section 34 IPC fixing
constructive liability conclusively silences such a refined plea of
extrication. (See Amir Hussain v. State of U.P. ; Maina Singh v. State of
Rajasthan .) Lord Sumner's classic legal shorthand for constructive criminal
liability, expressed in the Miltonic verse 'They also serve who only stand and
wait' a fortiori embraces cases of common intent instantly formed, triggering a
plurality of persons into an adventure in criminality, some hitting, some
missing, some splitting hostile heads, some spilling drops of blood. Guilt goes
with community of intent coupled with participatory presence or operation. No
finer juristic niceties can be pressed into service to nullify or jettison the
plain punitive purpose of the Penal Code." *
In a situation when all the accused but one have been acquitted of the charge,
it is possible to convict even the solitary accused under Section 302 with the
aid of Section 34 (See also in this connection Sukh Ram v. State of U.P. and
Pipal Singh v. State of Punjab )
Learned counsel finally made a desperate appeal that if they were guilty, the
appellants could be convicted only under Section 304 Part I IPC and not under
Section 302. We are afraid, this plea is also not open. The situation was not
one of a free fight. On the other hand, the evidence on record indicates that
the intention was to ambush, attack and kill the persons, who were coming to
protest about the unlawful construction of the bund. In our view, the situation
is covered by Section 302 and not by Section 304, as urged.
We find no substance in these appeals, which are hereby dismissed.