SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
Kulwant Singh @ Kulbansh Singh
Vs
State of Bihar
(Arijit Pasayat and D. K. Jain, JJ)
Appeal (Crl.) 834 of 2007; Criminal Appeal No. 834 of 2007 (Arising Out of Slp (Crl.) No. 5104 of 2006)
21.06.2007
JUDGMENT
DR. ARIJIT PASAYAT, J.
1. Leave granted.
2. Challenge in this appeal is to the order passed by a Division Bench of Patna
High Court. Appeals filed by the appellant and two co-accused were dismissed by
a common judgment.
3. Accused Uma Shankar was charged for commission of offence punishable under
Section 302 of the Indian Penal Code, 1860 (in short
the 'IPC') for having committed murder of Manji Singh (hereinafter referred to
as the 'deceased'). Accused appellant Kulwant Singh and Awadh Singh were charged
in terms of Section 302 read with Section 109 IPC for having abetted the
aforesaid murder of the deceased by Uma Shankar. The trial Court found that the
accusations have been established against the accused persons, Kulwant and
Awadh and accordingly sentenced each for life for the offence punishable under
Section 302 read with Section 109 IPC.
4. Before the High Court the basic stand of the appellants was that there was
absolutely no motive for the gruesome crime. The first information report (in
short the 'FIR') has not been proved to have been filed in the manner as
claimed. The High Court found the evidence to be cogent and credible and held
that no interference was called for.
5. Background facts in a nutshell are as follows: Manji Singh (hereinafter
referred to as 'the deceased') who was a teacher in a non-affiliated Sanskrit
School had suffered expulsion from the Institution. Accused-appellant and two
co-accused and the deceased were agnates and they were separate in mess and
business from each other and were residing in houses adjacent to each other. As
usually happens, there had been paltry dispute between females of the two
families and as a fall out, after the said incident it was alleged that while
the deceased was feeding cattle near his house, accused Uma Shankar Singh
hurled abuses on him, pursuant to which accused appellant Kulwant Singh and
accused Awadh Singh came out and exhorted Umashankar Singh to shoot. As for
Umashankar Singh it was alleged that shortly thereafter he having brought one
barrel gun from his house, pumped bullets in the chest of the deceased who
dropped on the ground. Though all efforts were made by the family of the
deceased for his survival before he could be admitted to Ara Sadar Hospital,
where he was taken by the family members, he was declared dead and with these
accusations fardbeyan of Kariman Singh was recorded by Shri S.N. Tiwary, ASI of
Ara Town Police Station, following which formal First Information Report was
drawn up at the Police Station. Investigation was undertaken. Charges were
framed and accused faced trial.
As noted above, trial Court convicted the accused which was upheld by the High
Court.
6. In support of the appeal, learned counsel for the appellant submitted that
the relatives of the deceased who are the so called eye witnesses lodged the
first information report and conviction cannot be made on the evidence of the
relatives. PW-1 was the wife of the deceased. PW-2 and PW-3 who claimed to be
eye witnesses were also relatives of the deceased.
7. Learned counsel for the State submitted that merely because the eye
witnesses are relatives of the deceased, their evidence should not be discarded
and after detailed analysis the trial Court and the High Court have found the
prosecution version cogent.
8. It is to be noted that PWs 2 and 3 are neighbours of both the accused and
the deceased. No foundation was laid to substantiate the allegation that the
relatives had any special reason to depose in favour of the prosecution. Since
PWs 2 and 3 are neighbours of the accused and the deceased, the question of
their being partial to prosecution does not arise. That being so, there
is no question to discard the veracity of the prosecution version. The evidence
of PWs 2 and 3 was cogent and the courts below have rightly relied upon their
evidence.
9. There is no proposition in law that relatives are to be treated as
untruthful witnesses. On the contrary, reason has to be shown when a plea of
partiality is raised to show that the witnesses had reason to shield the actual
culprit and falsely implicate the accused. No evidence has been led in this
regard.
10. Section 109 IPC reads as follows:-
"109- PUNISHMENT OF ABETMENT IF THE ACT ABETTED IS COMMITTED IN
CONSEQUENCE AND WHERE NO EXPRESS PROVISION IS MADE FOR ITS PUNISHMENT.
Whoever abets any offence shall, if the act abetted is committed in consequence
of the abetment and no express provision is made by this Code for the
punishment of such abetment, be punished with the punishment provided for the
offence.
Explanation : An act or offence is said to be committed in consequence of
abetment, when it is committed in consequence of the instigation, or in
pursuance of the conspiracy, or with the aid which constitutes the abetment.
Illustrations
(a) A offers a bribe to B, a public servant, as a reward for showing A some
favour in the exercise of B's official functions. B accepts the bribe. A has
abetted the offence defined in section 161.
(b) A instigates B to give false evidence. B in consequence of the instigation,
commits that offence. A is guilty of abetting that offence, and is liable to
the same punishment as B.
(c) A and B conspire to poison Z. A in pursuance of the conspiracy, procures
the poison and delivers it to B in order that he may administer it to Z. B, in
pursuant of the conspiracy, administers the poison to Z in A's absence and
thereby causes Z's death. Here B is guilty of murder. A is guilty of abetting
that offence by conspiracy, and is liable to the punishment for murder."
11. Where a person aids and abets the perpetrator of a crime at the very time
the crime is committed, he is a principal of the second degree and section 109
applies. But mere failure to prevent the commission of an offence is not by
itself an abetment of that offence. Considering the definition in Section 109
strictly, the instigation must have reference to the thing that was done and
not to the thing that was likely to have been done by the person who is
instigated. It is only if this condition is fulfilled that a person can be
guilty of abetment by instigation. Section 109 is attracted even if the
abettor is not present when the offence abetted is committed provided that he
had instigated the commission of the offence or has engaged with one or more
other persons in a conspiracy to commit an offence and pursuant to the
conspiracy some act or illegal omission takes place or has been intentionally
induced the commission of an offence by an act or illegal omission. In the
absence of direct involvement, conviction for abetment is not sustainable. (See
Joseph Kurian v. State of Kerala. Â
12. Section 109 provides that if the act abetted is committed in consequence of
abetment and there is no provision for the punishment of such abetment then the
offender is to be punished with the punishment provided for the original
offence. Section 109 applies even where the abettor is not present. Active
abetment at the time of committing the offence is covered by Section 109. Act
abetted in Section 109 means the specific offence abetted. Mere help in the
preparation for the commission of an offence which is not ultimately committed
is not abetment within the meaning of Section l09. "Any offence'' in
Section 109 means offence punishable under the IPC or any Special or Local law.
The abetment of an offence under the Special or Local law, therefore, is
punishable under Section 109. I.P.C. For constituting offence of abetment,
intentional and active participation by the abettor is necessary.
13. There is a distinction between Section 109 and Section 114. Section 114
applies where a criminal first abets an offence to be committed by another
person, and is subsequently present at its commission. Active abetment at the
time of committing the offence is covered by Section 109. and Section 114 is
clearly intended for an abetment previous to the actual commission of the
crime, that is before the first steps have been taken to commit it.
Section 114 is not applicable in every case in which the abettor is present at
the commission of the offence abetted. While Section 109 is a section dealing
generally with abetment, Section 114 applies to those cases only in which not
only is the abettor present at the time of the commission of the offence but
abetment has been committed prior to and independently of his presence.
14. When the factual scenario is tested on the background of principles of law
set out above, it is clear that Section 109 IPC has clear application.
15. The appeal is sans merit, deserves to be dismissed which we direct.