1974 INSC 0039 Chawla and Another Vs State of Haryana Criminal Appeal No. 109 of 1973 (V. R. Krishna Iyer, R. S. Sarkaria JJ) 12.02.1974 JUDGMENT SARKARIA, J. - 1. The facts giving rise to this appeal by special leave are Jagga had three sons; Bishna, Ram Lal and Har Lal. Ram Dia, Dal Singh and Ran Singh deceased were the sons of Bishna. Ram Lal and his sons, Chawla and Dhanna, Har Lal, his son, Puran, and Har Lal's grandson, Mukhtiara, are the accused in this case. 2. During consolidation operations in their village, Deora, dispute arose between Ram Lal and Har Lal on one side and Bishna on the other over the allotment of a plot, measuring 4 1/4 acres. This plot was allotted by the Consolidation Officer to Bishna; but in revision, the Additional Director, Consolidation on May 4, 1968, set aside the order of the Consolidation Officer and allotted it to Ram Lal and Har Lal, accused. Bishna died and the deceased succeeded him. Aggrieved, the deceased persons moved the High Court under Article 226 of the Constitution for bringing up and quashing the order of the Director. The High Court dismissed this petition on July 14, 1971 and upheld the order of the Director. On October 4, 1971, the Assistant Collector made an order that in implementation of the order of the Director of Consolidation, the land the demarcated at the spot and possession delivered to the allottees. It was further directed that the land be mutated in favour of the allottees. On October 5, 1971, the Kanungo in compliance with the Assistant Collector's order, demarcated the land at the spot and delivered symbolical possession of Kila Nos. 129/7, 129/171, 129/14, 129/16 as those field were under crop. He delivered actual possession of the other fields, comprised in the allotment, which were not under crops, including Khasra No. 129/612 to the accused, Ram Lal and Har Lal. The deceased person, however did not submit to this symbolical and actual delivery of possession. They instituted a suit in the civil Court at Kaithal and obtained an ex parte interim injunction restraining the accused from taking possession of the land. This injunction was serve on Ram Lal accused on November 5, 1971. 3. On November 11, 1971 Ram Dia, Dal Singh and Ran Singh deceased went to the fields with their ploughs. Dal Singh started reaping chari crop, Ram Singh started ploughing the field, while Ram Dia went on a round of the field. At about 11 a.m. all the six accused, in a body, reached the field. Puran and Ram Lal were armed with suas (iron spiked sticks), Dhanna with a gandase, and Har Lal, Mukhtiara and Chawla with lathis. On reaching the spot, Har Lal exhorted his companions to kill the deceased. Thereupon, Chawla, Puran and Ram Lal gave blows with their respective weapons to Ram Dia. Ram Singh came to the rescue of his brother. Thereupon, Dhanna and Mukhtiara assaulted him with their respective weapons. Dal Singh interceded but all the six accused belaboured him. The occurrence was witnessed by Smt. Mali, Nasib Singh and Shadi who had run to a safe, distance and stood there. After the assault, the accused run away taking their weapons with them. Ram Dia died at the spot, Dal Singh succumbed to his injuries after his admission in the Civil Hospital Kaithal, while Ran Singh expired in Medical College/Hospital, Rohtak on November 13, 1971. 4. The Sessions Judge convicted and sentenced Chawla, Puran and Mukhtiara accused to death under section 302/34, Penal Code. He further convicted them under Section 302/149 on three counts and sentenced them each to imprisonment for life. A conviction under Section 148, Penal Code, with a sentence of one year's imprisonment each was also recorded. The remaining accused were also convicted under Sections 302/149, 34 and 148, Penal Code, and on the capital charge sentenced to imprisonment for life, each. 5. On appeal the High Court commented the death sentence of Puran to one of imprisonment for life on the ground that it was not known as to which of the three fatal injuries to Ram Dia had been caused by Puran. It confirmed the death sentences of Chawla and Mukhtiara, for committing the murders of Ram Dia, and Ram Singh, respectively. The convictions of Ram Lal, Har Lal, and Dhanna under section 302/149 was also maintained. 6. Special leave in this case was granted only with regard to the capital sentence infected on Chawla and Mukhtiara, appellants. 7. Mr. Bahi, learned amicus curiae has urged that the death sentences were not justified because of these alleviating circumstances - (a) The came of the tragedy can be traced to the unreasonable, stubborn, and blame- worthy conduct of the deceased in retaking or retaining possession of the land that after a protracted litigation had been finally allotted and made over to the accused party by the Director of Consolidation. The violence seems to have erupted because of the wrongful act of the deceased in ploughing Kila No. 6/2 etc., actual possession of which had been only delivered by the Consolidation authorities, earlier to the accused party. Ram Dia armed with a stick was on guard duty while the other deceased were ploughing or sowing in the disputed land. Ram Dia provoked the assault by dealing blows with a stick to Har Lal accused. (b) In the case of Chawla appellant, it was not clear whether any fatal injury to Ram Dia was caused by him. In any case, it was unreasonable to mark him out for capital punishment for inflicting only one of the three fatal injuries with a lathi, when the coaccused to whom the punctured, fatal wounds were attributed, have been awarded the lesser penalty; (c) That Chawla and Mukhtiara appellants are raw youths, aged 25 and 24 years, respectively, who probably acted under the instigation of their father and that the death sentence has been hovering over their heads for an agonisingly long period of about 1 years and 10 months. 8. The above circumstances, according to Mr. Bahl, taken separately as well as collectively, furnish sufficient ground for mitigation of the capital sentence. Reference has been made to the decisions of this Court in Vinan Rodrick v. State of W. B. ((1971) 1 SCC 468 : 1971 SCC (Cri) 192) Gurdip Singh v. State of Punjab ((1977) 3 SCC 425 : 1971 SCC (Cri) 673); State of Maharashtra v. V. Manglya Dhavu Kongil ((1972) 3 SCC 46 : 1972 SCC (Cri) 237); State of Bihar v. Pashupati Singh ((1974) 3 SCC 376 : 1973 SCC (Cri) 1026) and Gajanand v. State of U. P. (AIR 1954 SC 695 : 1954 Cri LJ 1746) 9. On the other hand, Mr. Vikram Mahajan, learned Counsel for the State vehemently contends that none of the circumstances pointed out by Mr. Bahl, is a good extenuating factor. It is emphasised that the accused went armed with a determination to kill the deceased person and they succeeded in their nefarious design. This was a case of cold-blooded triple murder and no leniency in the matter of sentences was called for. It is argued that the mere fact that the murders were committed at the exhortation of the eldest accused Har Lal, was no ground in law for not inflicting the capital sentence on the appellants. He has further pointed out that the mere fact that a period of about 1 years and 10 months has elapsed since the award of the capital sentence, which in mainly due to the protracted proceedings, is no ground for reducing the capital sentence. 10. In support of his arguments, learned Counsel has relied on Brij Bhukhan v. State of U. P. (AIR 1957 SC 474 : 1957 Cri LJ 591); Mizaji v. State of U. P. (AIR 1959 SC 572 : 1959 Suppl 1 SCR 940 : 1959 Cri LJ 777); Jagmohan Singh v. State of U. P. (1973 SCC (Cri) 169 : (1973) 1 SCC 20) 11. True, according to the finding of the Courts below, the occurrence took place actually in Kila No. 6/1, and not in Kila No. 6/2, which was in dispute. The very numbering of these fields by the settlement authorities shows that they are sub-division or parts of the same Kila No. 6, The disputed land was thus intermingled with the plot of occurrence. The deceased were feeling aggrieved by the partition and allotment of this land including Kila No. 6. Indeed, despite the conclusion of the dispute by the consolidation authorities, the deceased were keeping it alive. The Kanungo's report (Ex. PJJ), dated October 5, 1971, whereby possession of the disputed land was delivered to the accused party, shows that Kila No. 6/2 in Rectangle No. 129 was one of those disputed plots, the actual possession of which had been delivered to the accused party. It was the prosecution case, itself, that shortly before the assault, Ran Singh was ploughing to sow wheat, while Dal Singh was cutting chari from the field adjacent to the disputed land and Ram Dia was having a round of the fields, possibly to keep a watch against the accused. Chawla in his examination under Section 342, Cr. P.C., gave this version of the incident : "......... Ram Dia asked us to give up the possession of the land and hand over the same to him. We told him that he could take back the possession in the same way as the possession had been delivered to us by the Tehsildar, Girdawar and Patwari. At this, Ram Dia said that he would take the possession, forcibly. We told him that we would not hand over the possession by force. On the day of occurrence Ram Dia and his brothers stated ploughing the land and uprooting the crops sown by us, with the help of two-ploughs. At sun-rise Har Lal armed with a lathi, I armed with a two- pronged jaily and Ram Lal armed with a lathi were going on the road from Deora or Ujana to go to our field ........ Har Lal told us that it seemed to him that the land in dispute was being ploughed by the deceased. Har Lal went and stood in front of the bullocks and told Ram Dia that he should have been satisfied after cultivating the land since the consolidation and that he should desist from ploughing the land and destroying the crop. At this Ram Dia gave a lathi blow which hit Har Lal on the right hand. At this Har Lal, Ram Lal and myself gave injuries with our respective weapons ...... We got Har Lal medically examined ......." 12. Through this version of the accused was not sufficient to make out a case of private defence, yet, coupled with the Kanungo's report, Ex. PJJ, and the surrounding circumstances, it strongly points to the conclusion that the tragedy was probably precipitated by the deceased's insistence on cultivation and possession of the disputed land including those fields of which actual possession had been duly delivered by the consolidation authorities to the accused. The appellants had order of Additional Director of Consolidation in their favour in respects of the land in dispute. The deceased challenged that order by a writ petition under Article 226 in the High Court which dismissed the same and upheld the order of the Director. Thereafter on October, 5, 1971, in implementation of the Director's order symbolical possession of that part of the land which was under crops, and actual possession of the fields which were vacant, was delivered, to the accused. It seems that the deceased under the cloak of an ex parte interim injunction obtained by them on November 4, 1971, were determined to retain or retake possession even of those field of which actual possession had been delivered to the accused party by the consolidation authorities. 13. This takes us to the next circumstance stressed by Mr. Bahl. 14. Chawla has been awarded the capital sentence for the murder of Ram Dia. The part ascribed to the appellant by the witnesses, who admittedly had run away to some distance at the commencement of the assault, was that he had inflicted a fatal below with a lathi on the deceased. Dr. Raj Gupta who conducted the autopsy, testified that there were eight injuries all on the dead body of Ram Dia out of which, six were punctured wounds. Injury No. 6 was an abrasion on the left forearm. Injury No. 8 was a depression of the frontal and partial bones. All the injuries collectively, in the opinion of the Doctor, were sufficient to cause death in the ordinary course of nature. It is injury No. 8 which was attributed by the witnesses to Chawla, appellant. In the examination in chief, the Doctor did not say that this injury was by itself, fatal. In cross examination in the committal Court, she said that injuries Nos. 1, 2 and 4, individually, as well as collectively, could cause death. At the trial, Dr. Raj Gupta changed this version and said that injuries Nos. 1, 4, and 8 were individually sufficient in the ordinary course of nature to cause death. She excluded injury No. 2 from the category of fatal injuries, and, in its place, substituted injury No. 8. If Doctor's former statement made in the committal Court was correct, then injury No. 8 was not a fatal injury and the three fatal injuries (1, 2 and 4) were punctured wounds which could have been caused by Ram Lal and Puran only, who were armed with sharp-pointed weapons. Further, in the committal Court, Dr. Gupta had clearly testified that none of the 8 injuries found on the body of Ram Dia had been caused with a blunt weapon. On this point, also, she took up a different position at the trial and said that injury No. 8 might have been caused with a lathi. In any case, apart from a minor abrasion on the left forearm which could have been the result of a fall, there was only one injury on the body of Ram Dia, caused with a lathi. It could not be said that Chawla played the dominant role in the assault. His part, if not less, was in no way greater than that of Har Lal and Ram Lal who had caused the fatal punctured wounds. 15. We have referred to the contradictory positions taken by the medical officer, not to show that Chawla could not be convicted under Section 302, Penal Code, but to appreciate his precise role in the assault on Ram Dia, for the purpose of sentence, only. From Dr. Gupta's evidence it is clear that he had caused only one injury, with a lathi, it Ram Dia and his part in the assault, if not less, was in no way greater than that of Har Lal and Ram Lal who had caused no less than six injuries, including two fatal, to the deceased. 16. Further circumstance which deserves consideration is that theses raw youths, Chawla and Mukhtiara, appear to have acted under the instigation of their elder, Har Lal. 17. Still another factor to be taken into account in prescribing the punishments is that death penalty has been brooding over the heads of these young men for an agonisingly long period. They were committed for trial two years in February 1972, and were condemned to death by the trial Court in April 1972. By cold logic, this circumstance, as a mitigating factor, more often than not, being the unwanted work of Law's delays, is vulnerable. But humane considerations of administering justice tempered with mercy have impelled the Courts to recognise it as an ameliorating circumstance. In the last half a century, the science of criminology has taken great strides. There has been rethinking about crime and punishment. The process is continuing. Winds of compassion for the criminal blowing the world over, are affecting law and logic, the Judge and the Legislators alike. Draconian notion and retributive relics of lex talionis are yielding to "Mankind's concern for charity." In every creature, "born but to die", it is "blindness to the future, kindly given" that keeps life going. But in a condemned man, the Book of Fate open before him constantly telling of the doom prescribed, the life stream of hopes and aspirations rapidly starts drying under the excruciating heat of the mental desert. With passage of time the prisoner painfully awaiting execution, become no better than a "lifeless" mummy. It was in this perspective that this Court in State of Bihar v. Pashupati Singh (supra), ruled that it there has been a long interval between that date of the offence and the consideration of appeal by the Supreme Court, the capital sentence for the commission of an offence under section 302, Penal code, for which the accused has undergone a long period of mental agony, the sentence of death may not be exacted. A similar note was struck by a Bench of this Court constituted by both of us in Ediga Anamma v. State of Andhra Pradesh. ((1974) 4 SCC 443 : 1974 SCC (Cri) 479) 18. Parliament also has taken note of the current penological thought. Before Criminal Amendment Act 26 of 1955, for the offence of murder, death sentence was the rule and transportation for life an exception, and if the lesser penalty was to be awarded, then sub-section (5) of Section 367, Code of criminal procedure, required reasons to be given. By Act 26 of 1955, this sub-section (5) was recast and the requirement of giving reasons for the lesser punishment was done away with. The former rule is thus no longer operative. The Court has now a discretion to award either of the two penalties prescribed under Section 302, Penal Code. Death sentence is now exacted only where the murder was perpetrated with marked brutality. 19. Parliament has passed the criminal Procedure Code, 1973 which is coming into force shortly. In it the position is reverse of what it was before the Amendment of 1955. After this Bill becomes law, it will be obligatory for the Court to give reasons if the death sentences is to be inflicted. The Penal Code Bill, 1953, which is on the anvil reserves capital punishment for only a few types of murders. 20. We have referred to the modern penological thought and current legislative trends not with has view to decide this case on the basis of what is yet in embryo, but to have a proper perspective for appreciation of the circumstance which have been urged in this case in mitigation of the sentence. To sum up, these are : (a) There was some probability of the tragedy having been provoked or precipitated by the blame-worthy and intransigent conduct of the deceased in regard to the retaining to retaking possession of the land that had been finally allotted to the accused by the consolidation authorities. (b) Chawla appellant was responsible for causing only one out of the three fatal injuries received by Ram Dia, deceased. Probably, that was the only blow given by him to the deceased while the remaining is punctured wounds were all caused by other accused who have been awarded the lesser sentence. (c) Chawla and Mukhtiara, appellants are immature youths who appear to have acted at the instigation of their elder, Har Lal. (d) Prolonged mental torture suffered by Chawla and Mukhtiara on account of their being constantly haunted by the spectre of death for the last one year and 10 months. 21. Perhaps, none of the above circumstances, taken singly and judged rigidly by the old Draconion standards would be sufficient to justify the imposition of the lesser penalty; nor are these circumstances adequate enough to palliate the offence of murder. But in their totality, they tilt the judicial scales in favour of life rather than putting it out. 22. The circumstances considered above have long been recognised by courts as valid grounds for mitigating the sentence. They are not innovations. Formerly what was in the penumbra of extenuation, "dim-descried", now, in the twilight of compassion, has become clearly discernible. 23. Before we part with this judgment, we may in fairness to the learned Counsel for the State, note it here that the rulings cited by him turn on their own facts. In Mizaji's case and Jagmohan Singh's case (supra), the accused were awarded capital sentences as they were found guilty of having fired the fatal shots with fire arms. In Brij Bhukhan's case (supra), the victim had been dragged out of his own house and mercilessly beaten. Such is not the case here. 24. For the foregoing reasons, while maintaining the convictions of the appellants, we would allow the appeal and commute the death sentences of the appellants to that of imprisonment for life on each count. The sentences shall run concurrently.