03 November 1987
Supreme Court
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BALWANT KAUR Vs UNION TERRITORY OF CHANDIGARH

Bench: VENKATACHALLIAH,M.N. (J)
Case number: Appeal Criminal 742 of 1979


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PETITIONER: BALWANT KAUR

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: UNION TERRITORY OF CHANDIGARH

DATE OF JUDGMENT03/11/1987

BENCH: VENKATACHALLIAH, M.N. (J) BENCH: VENKATACHALLIAH, M.N. (J) SEN, A.P. (J)

CITATION:  1988 AIR  139            1988 SCR  (1) 745  1988 SCC  (1)   1        JT 1987 (4)   239  1987 SCALE  (2)1019

ACT:      Indian Evidence  Act, 1872:  Section 114  111. (b)  and 133-Accomplice’s evidence-Credibility  of-Nature and  extent of   corroboration-Necessity   for-Accused’s   conviction-on uncorroborated evidence-Effect of.      Criminal Procedure  Code, 1973:  Section 313-Approver’s testimony-To be put to accused in examination-Necessity for.

HEADNOTE: %      The prosecution  alleged that  the married  life of the appellant, who  was said  to be 151/2 years of age, was in a serious disarray,  that she  and the  non-appealing  accused were on  terms of  illicit intimacy, that she also submitted herself to  PW 2  in  an  extra-marital  relation,  that  on 13.11.73 she  implored the non-appealing accused and PW 2 to free her  from a  cruel husband by doing away with him, that she agreed  that she  would, thereafter  live with  the non- appealing accused  as his  wife, that the three designed and conspired to  do away  with the  deceased, in  pursuance  of which the  appellant persuaded  her husband to go to the bus stand at  Chandigarh at  9.30 a.m.  On 14th  November, 1973, where the  non-appealing accused  and PW  2 were waiting for him as  pre-arranged, and  took him to Pinjore by bus, where they consumed  liquor together and the non-appealing accused purchased Ghotna, that while all the three were walking back to Chandigarh  and  climbed  the  way  side  hill  the  non- appealing accused gave blows on the head of the unsuspecting deceased with  the Ghotna,  while PW 2 pinned him down, that they concealed  the clothes  and body of the deceased in the nearby bushes,  that both  of them returned to Chandigarh by night fall,  and the nonappealing accused informed PW 2 that he, in  turn, had informed the appellant of the death of her husband, that  the mother  of the  deceased, PW 19, lodged a complaint on  13.12.73 about her missing son in writing with the Senior  Superintendent of  Police, Chandigarh,  alleging that she  had learnt  that a  certain person  of the village Lahor Khoda  with his two sons and the Sarpanch with his two other relatives  had killed  her son,  the motive being that her son had developed illicit relations with the daughter of the person, that after coming to know of her husband’s death

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the appellant  misled her mother-in-law PW 19. into making a H 746 report  to   the  police  containing  false  and  misleading information in  an attempt  to draw a red-herring across the trial.      The non-appealing  accused was  arrested on  3.4.75. On his information Ex. P8, a pair of shoes, purse, 25 pieces of bones including  an incomplete  human skull  were recovered. The appellant and PW 2 were arrested on 8.5.75.      After  completing   the  investigation,   charges  were brought against  the appellants  and  the  two  accused  for conspiracy and  murder. PW 2, who was one of the co-accused, turned approver.      The  trial   court  on  the  basis  of  the  approver’s testimony as   corroborated  by other evidence held the non- appealing accused  and the  appellant guilty of the offences under sections  302 and  120-B of  the I.P.C.  and sentenced them to  imprisonment for  life. The  High  Court  dismissed their appeals and confirmed the convictions and sentence.      In the  appeal to  this Court,  it was  urged that  the evidence of  the approver  insofar as  the compicity  of the appellant was  concerned, lacked  corroboration on  material particulars and  that no  conviction could  be sustained  on such uncorroborated accomplice’s testimony.      On the  question as  to: (1)  the nature  and extent of corroboration of  an  accomplice’s  evidence;  and  (2)  the procedure for  the trial  of offences by a ’child’ under the East Punjab Children’s Act, 1949, ^      HELD: 1.1  An accomplice, by long legal tradition, is a notoriously  infamous   witness,  one  who  being  partipes- criminis, purchases  his immunity  by  accepting  to  accuse others. Section  114, illustration  (b) of  the Evidence Act envisages   the   presumptive   uncreditworthiness   of   an accomplice. But, then section 133 provides that a conviction is not  illegal merely because it rests upon an accomplice’s uncorroborated testimony. [753C- D]      1.2 In  indictments, particularly  of  serious  crimes, counsel of  caution and  the rule of prudence enjoin that it is unsafe  to rest  a conviction on the evidence of a guilty partner in  a crime without independent corroboration on the material  particulars.   Judicial  experience   was,   thus, elevated to  a rule  of law. lt is a practice which deserves all the reverence of law. [753D-E]      l.3 The  nature and  extent of  the corroboration  must necessarily 747 vary  with  the  nature  and  circumstances  of  each  case. Enunciation of any general rule, valid for all occasions is, at once, unwise and unpractical. [753F]      1.4 The  corroboration has  to be  of two  kinds; first belonging to  the area  of reassurance  of the credit of the approver himself  as a  trustworthy witness; and the second- which arises  for conclusion  after the  court is  satisfied about  the   creditibility  of   the  approver-as   to   the corroboration  in  material  particulars  not  only  of  the commission of  the crime but also of the complicity of other accused-person in  the crime. If on the first area the court is not  satisfied, the  second does  not arise. However, the two areas  of corroboration are not two separate, watertight compartments. The  evidence as  a  whole  will  have  to  be examined to  reach conclusions  on  both  aspects.  [757G-H; 752C]      Sharvana Bhavan  v. State  of Madras,  AIR 1966 SC 1273

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referred      1.5 The controversy in the present case in the ultimate analysis, belongs to the second area, whether the approver’s testimony as  to appellant’s  complicity in  the  conspiracy could  safely   be  held   to  have   been  corroborated  by independent evidence on the material particulars. [758F-G]      There was  a considerable  lapse of  time  between  the death of  decease and  the arrest  of the  appellant and the non-appealing accused. There is no evidence to show that, in the interregnum,  there was any liasion between the two. The incriminating circumstances  in the evidence of the approver appearing against the appellant that on 13.11.1973 appellant wept and  implored the  non-appealing accused and PW 2 to do away with  the deceased  and that appellant also agreed that she would,  thereafter, live  with the non-appealing accused had had  to be  put to  the appellant  m the  course of  her examination under section 313 Cr. P.C. but this has not been done. Appellant was not afforded an opportunity to submit an explanation to  it. That  part of the evidence must for that reason, be excluded from consideration. [759C-E]      Harijan Magha  Jesha v.  State of Gujarat, [1979] 3 SCC 474, referred to.      On a consideration of the entire matter, the approver’s evidence in regard to the complicity of the appellant in the conspiracy   lacks   corroboration   on   certain   material particulars necessary to connect the 748 appellant. A little more reassurance than is afforded by the state of  evidence in  the  case  is  perhaps  necessary  to convict appellant.  The appellant in the circumstances would be entitled to the benefit of doubt. [759F]      At the  time of  the commission  of  the  offence,  the appellant, even on the basis of the observations made by the sessions court,  was about 15 years of age and was a ’child’ within the  meaning of East Punjab Children’s Act, 1949. The sessions court  invoked the proviso to section 27 of the Act and held that the appellant was so depraved a character that none of  the other methods mentioned in the section in which the case  could legally  be dealt  with was  suitable in her case. [759G; 760C]      In view  of the  finding that the appellant is entitled to the  benefit of doubt, any examination of the legality or propriety of the procedure adopted in the case in the matter of trial  of a ’child’ under the East Punjab Children’s Act, 1949 and  the correctness  of the view of the sessions court in appealing  to the  proviso to  section 27, and sentencing appellant to  imprisonment for  life is not necessary . [760 C-D]      Appeal  allowed.   Conviction  and   sentence  of   the appellant set  aside and  appellant directed  to be  set  at liberty. However,  conviction and sentence of the other non- appearing accused left undisturbed. [760E]      Wigmore on  Evidence: 3rd Editition Vol. VII para 2054, Rex v. Bhaskerville, [1916] 2 KB 658, Rameshwar Kalyan Singh v. State  of Rajasthan  AIR 1952  SC 54,  Director of Public Persecutions v.  Kill bourne,  [1973]  Appeal  A.C.  729/All England law  reports 1982(1) page 815(g), R. v. Beck, [1982] 1 All  ER 807(CA), R. v. Spencer, [1986] 2 All ER 928, R. v. Donat, [1986]  2 Cr.  App.  R.  1973,  Attorney  General  of Hongkong  v.  Wong  Muko  Ping  [1987]  2  W.L.R.  1033  and Halsbury’s Laws  of England  IV Ed. Vol. II p. 268, para 454 referred to.

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JUDGMENT:      ORIGINAL APPELLATE  JURISDICTION: Criminal  Appeal  No. 742 of 1979.      From the  Judgment and  order dated  16.1.1979  of  the Punjab and Haryana High Court in Crl. A.No. 656 of 1976.      A.S. Sohal and P.N. Puri for the Appellant.      Kiran Choudhri and T. Sridharan for the Respondent.      The Judgment of the Court was delivered by 749      VENKATACHALIAH  J.   This  appeal,  by  Special  Leave, preferred against  the Judgment  dated April 26, 1976 of the High Court  of Punjab & Haryana affirming the judgment dated 26 4  1976 of  the Sessions  Judge in  S.C. No.  S  of  1976 convicting appellant  for offences  under Sections  302  and 120-B of  the  Indian  Penal  Code  and  sentencing  her  to imprisonment for  life, raises  certain questions  as to the nature  and  extent  of  corroboration  of  an  accomplice’s evidence; and  as to the procedure for the trial of offences by a "child" under the East Punjab Children’s Act 1949.      Appellant-Balwant Kaur  was said  to be 15 1/2 years of age at  the time  of the  commission of  the offence alleged against her.      2.  From  14.11.1973  the  whereabouts  of  appellant’s husband Pritam  Singh, a  police-constable, were  not known. His mother  Mukhtiar Kaur  (P.W. 19)  reported this fact and expressed her  apprehensions in  the matter in her complaint to the  Superintendent of  Police. Appellant was arrested on 8.5.1975. Nand  Singh and  Ram Sarup  were also  arrested on 8.5. 1975. Ram Sarup became an approver. Appellant’s defence was one of total denial.      3. The  judgment of  the High  Court  under  appeal  is common to  Criminal Appeal No. 676 of 1976 preferred by Nand Singh who  was convicted  under Sections  302, 364,  201 and 120-B of I.P.C. and also sentenced to imprisonment for life.      4. Appellant’s  husband, Pritam  Singh for whose murder appellant and  the said  Nand Singh had been arraigned, was, at the  relevant time,  a  police-constable  at  the  Police Station West,  Sector-11 Chandigarh.  Nand Singh was another constable at  the same  Police Station. Nand Singh’s brother Bhag Singh  and Pritam  Singh were  neighbours, residing  in adjacent Government-quarters in Sector 20-A, Chandigarh. Ram Sarup,  who  later  turned  approver,  was  another  police- constable  on   Guard  duty   at  the   Punjab  Raj  Bhavan, Chandigarh.      5. The  married life  of Appellant  and  Pritam  Singh, according to  the prosecution, lacked connubial felicity and was marked  by constant  bickerings and  quarrels, the cause for this  discord being  the addiction  of Pritam  Singh  to liquor. It  is the  prosecution case that Pritam Singh was a dipsomaniac  and  was  constantly  subjecting  appellant  to corporeal  intransigence.   It  was   further  alleged  that appellant had  developed illicit  intimacy with  Nand Singh. Ram Sarup, in the course of his visits 750 to Bhag  Singh’s house  met, and  became friendly  with Nand Singh and the two become accustomed to take liquor together. Ram Sarup  also knew  deceased Pritam  Singh. It  is alleged that on  occasions Nand  Singh, when  he  lost  self-control under the  influence of liquor, used to confide in Ram Sarup of his  illicit sexual exploits with appellant. This appears to have tempted Ram Sarup to ask Nand Singh to introduce Ram Sarup also to appellant for a similar intrigue.      6. On  November 13,  1973, in  the afternoon  when  Ram Sarup was  off-duty, Nand  Singh took  Ram Sarup  to his own quarters in  Sector 20 A-said to be at a short distance from

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the appellant’s  residence-and the  two had liquor together. Thereafter, Nand  Singh is stated to have taken Ram Sarup to the residence  of, and  introduced him  to the appellant and persuaded her  to gratify  the desire  of  Ram  Sarup  also. Appellant and  Ram Sarup are stated to have indulged in acts of illegal intimacy.      Later, the  same afternoon,  the  three  met  again  at appellant’s home  when, it  would  appear,  appellant  while narrating the privations and hardships endured by her at the hands of  her husband broke-down and implored Nand Singh and Ram Sarup  to do away with Pritam Singh. She appears to have also offered that after Pritam singh’s death she would marry and live  with Nand Singh, who was then unmarried. According to the prosecution, it was agreed amongst the three that the appellant should  persuade her  husband to  reach Chandigarh bus-stand the  following day i.e. November 14, 1973 and that Nand Singh  and Ram Sarup, who would be present three, would entice him  away to  Pinjore with  the inducement  of liquor and, do away with him there.      7. Pursuant to this design and conspiracy, appellant is stated to  have persuaded her husband to go to the bus-stand at Chandigarh  at 9.30  a.m. On  14.11.1973 where Nand Singh and Ram  Sarup who were waiting for him as pre-arranged took him to  Pinjore by bus. There, all the three cumsumed liquor together. Nand  Singh  is  also  stated  to  have  purchased "Ghotna" on the pretext that his sister-in-law had asked for the purchase  of one. Thereafter, all the three agreed to go back Chandigarh  on foot  which took  them along  a  ’dandi’ passing by the side of the Pinjore gardens. They reached the railway line near Surajpur Cement Factory and took the foot- path towards  Chandigarh. When  the three reached a distance of almost  2 miles  from Surajpur, Nand Singh suggested that they should  climb up  a hill  on the  way side  to enjoy  a panoramic view  of Chandigarh.  Accordingly, all  the  three started climbing. Ram Sarup (P.W. 2) was ahead; Pritam Singh was in 751 the middle  with Nand Singh following behind him. Nand Singh is stated  to have suddenly administered 2-3 Ghotna blows on the head of the unsuspecting Pritam Singh and told Ram Sarup (P.W. 2)  to pin  the tottering Pritam Singh down. Ram Sarup pulled Pritam  Singh down  whereupon Nand Singh gave 8 to 10 more blows  with the  Ghotna on  the person of Pritam Singh. Then Nand  Singh threw  away the Ghotna and the two, namely, i.e. Nand  Singh and Ram Sarup, hastened towards Chandigarh. However, after the two had gone 2 furlongs or so, Nand Singh urged Ram  Sarup (P.W. 2) that they both go back to find out whether  Pritam   Singh  was   really  dead  or  not.  They, accordingly, returned  and ensured  that  Pritam  Singh  had died. They  removed the pants and Bush-shirt of the deceased and concealed them in a bush. Then, the body of Pritam Singh was also  concealed in  the nearby hushes. The turban of the Pritam Singh had fallen down at the spot.      Thereafter, the  two returned  to Chandigarh  by night- fall. Next  day, i.e.  On 15.11.1973, Nand Singh came to Raj Bhavan where  Ram Sarup was on duty and told the latter that he had,  in turn,  informed Balwant  Kaur of  the  death  of Pritam Singh.  This, in substance is the prosecution case as unfolded in  the evidence  of the  Ram Sarup  (P.W.  2)  who turned approver.      8. On  13. 12.1973, Mukhtiar Kaur (P.W. 19), the mother of deceased-Pritam  lodged a complaint about her missing son in  writing   with  the  Senior  Superintendent  of  Police, Chandigarh. In  that, it was stated that she had learnt from Pandit Sita  Ram that  a certain Naik Singh and his two sons

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of the  village Lahor  Khuda and  Dev Singh, the Sarpanch of that village  along with two other relatives of the Sarpanch had  killed  Pritam  Singh,  the  alleged  motive  was  that deceased Pritam  Singh,  when  he  was  earlier  serving  in Lahorkhuda had developed illicit relations with Naik Singh’s daughter, Prito.  At the trial Mukhtiar Kaur was examined to establish  that   this  complaint   was  engineered  by  the appellant and Nand Singh to put the investigation on a wrong scent.      Apparently, nothing  was heard  of the matter for along time till  3.4.1975, when  Nand Singh  was arrested  by  ASI Gulzara Singh  (P.W. 24).  On his  information Exg.  P. 8, a pair of  shoes, a  purse, 25  pieces of  bones including  an incomplete human  skull were  recovered. Dr.  Inderjit Dewan (P.W. I) examined the bones and was of the opinion that they were the remains of a well-built adult, but not old, male of a height  of about  S-9. According to P.W. 1, the person had died more  than 4  months previously. The death was ascribed in all probability to the injuries to the skull administered by a blunt weapon. P.W. 1 could 752 not, however  confirm whether  the injuries were ante-mortem or not.      Appellant was arrested by ASI Subhash Chander (P.W. 23) on 8.5.1975  and Ram  Sarup was  also arrested the same day. After the  completion  of  the  investigation  charges  were brought against  them for  conspiracy and  murder. The trial court  on   the  basis   of  the   approver’s  testimony  as corroborated by  other evidence,  held both Nand Singh , and the appellant  guilty of the offences they were charged with and sentenced  them to imprisonment for life. The High Court has  dismissed   their  appeals   and  has   confirmed   the convictions and the sentences.      9.  Shri  A.S.  Sohai,  Learned  counsel  appearing  in support of  the  appeal  urged  that  the  evidence  of  the Approver in  so  far  as  the  complicity  of  appellant  is concerned, lacked corroboration on materials particulars and that no conviction could be sustained on such uncorroborated accomplice’s testimony.      10. The  development of the law touching the competency and credit of an accomplice as witness against others is not without its interesting antecedents.      Historically, in the background of the political trials since the time of Henry VIII where ’King’s Evidence’ was the main dependence  of  the  crown  in  its  prosecutions,  the question of  the very  admissibility of  the evidence of the accomplice loomed large. In the 17th and the 18th centuries, it was  ruled repeatedly  by  the  English  courts  that  an accomplice was  a competent  witness. His  ’credit’  or  the sufficiency of  his evidence  as a  quantitative conception, however, remained  in the  background. Those  were days when ’form’ pre-dominated over the ’substance’ and the oath had a dead-weight of its own. It was for this reason that struggle was made to keep-out this evidence even at the threshold. On the further  development in  the law  which slowly  began to recognise the distinction between ’competency’ and ’credit’, Wigmore says: Wigmore on Evidence: 3rd Edition Vol. VII para 2054. G           "As time  went on,  and the  modern conception  of           testimony developed,  the possibility of admitting           a  witness   and  yet  discriminating  as  to  the           qualitative sufficiency  of his  testimony  became           more apparent;  and  the  way  was  open  for  the           consideration  of   this  question.   In   a   few           instances, as  the 1700s  wore on, and even before

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         then,  judicial   suggestions  are   found  as  to           feasibility of  such  a  discrimination.  But  not           until the end of that century does any Court seem 753           to have  acted  upon  such  a  suggestion  in  its           directions to  the jury.  About  that  time  there           comes  into   acceptance  a  general  practice  to           discourage a  conviction founded  solely upon  the           testimony of an accomplice uncorroborated.                But was  this practice  founded on  a rule of           law? Never, in England,-until modern times. It was           recognised constantly that the judge’s instruction           upon this point was a mere exercise of his common-           law function  of advising the jury upon the weight           of the evidence, and was not a statement of a rule           of law binding upon the jury".      ll. An  accomplice,  by  long  legal  tradition,  is  a notoriously  infamous   witness,  one  who  being  partipes- criminis, purchases  his immunity  by  accepting  to  accuse others. Section 114 Illus: (b) of the Evidence Act envisages the presumptive  uncredit-worthiness of  an accomplice.  But then, Section  133 provides that a conviction is not illegal merely because  it rests upon an accomplice’s uncorroborated testimony.      In indictments,  particularly of  serious  crimes,  the counsel of  caution and  the rule of prudence enjoin that it is unsafe  to rest  a conviction on the evidence of a guilty partner in  a crime without independent corroboration on the material  particulars.   Judicial  experience   was,   thus, elevated to  a rule  of law.  "It is  a practice" it is said "which deserves all the reverence of law."      The  nature   and  extent  of  the  corroboration  must necessarily vary  with the  nature and circumstances of each case.  Enunciation  of  any  general  rule,  valid  for  all occasions is, at once, unwise and unpractical. The aspect as to the  extent and  content of independent corroboration is, again, an  interesting area  of study.  One  view  was  that independent evidence  tending to  verify  any  part  of  the testimony of  the accomplice  should suffice. The other view required that  the corroborative  evidence should  not  only show that  part of  the accomplice  testimony is  true;  but should go  further and  also implicate the other accused. In R. v.  Bhaskerville, the Court of Criminal appeal in England favoured and adopted the second view.      Thirtyfive years ago, Bose J referring with approval to the principles  in Bhaskerville said that this branch of the law in  India is  the same  as in England and that the lucid exposition of it given by Lord Reading, cannot be bettered. 754      The felicitous  formulation of the law on the matter by that great  master of  phrase, Bose  J, which has now become classical, may be re-called:      " ... But to this extent the rules are clear:      (21) First, it  is not  necessary that  there should be           independent   confirmation   of   every   material           circumstance in  the sense  that  the  independent           evidence in  the case, apart from the testimony of           the  complainant  of  the  accomplice,  should  in           itself be sufficient to sustain conviction.      (22) Secondly, the  independent evidence  must not only           make  it  safe  to  believe  that  the  crime  was           committed but  must in some way reasonably connect           or  tend   to  connect  the  accused  with  it  by           confirming  in   some  material   particular   the           testimony of  the accomplice  or complainant  that

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         the accused  committed the  crime. This  does  not           mean that  the corroboration  as to  identity must           extend  to  all  the  circumstances  necessary  to           identify the accused with the offence.      (23) Thirdly,  the   corroboration   must   come   from           independent  source   and  thus   ordinarily   the           testimony  of   one  accomplice   would   not   be           sufficient to corroborate that of another      (24) Fourthly, the  corroboration need  not  be  direct           evidence that  the accused committed the crime. It           is  sufficient  if  it  is  merely  circumstantial           evidence of his connection with the crime .... " (See Rameshwar  Kalyan Singh v. State of Rajasthan, AIR 1952 SC 54).      In Rex  v. Bhaskerville, [ 1916] 2 KB 658 Lord Reading, CJ noticed the different views as to the extent and scope of reasonable corroboration:           ".... The  difference of opinion has arisen in the           main in  reference to  the  question  whether  the           corroborative evidence  must connect  the  accused           with  the  crime.  The  rule  of  practice  as  to           corroborative evidence  has arisen  in consequence           of the  danger of  convicting a  person  upon  the           unconfirmed testimony  of one  who is admittedly a           criminal .. " 755 Resolving the difference of opinion it was held:           "We hold  that evidence  in corroboration  must be           independent testimony which affects the accused by           connecting or  tending to  connect  him  with  the           crime. In  other words,  it must be evidence which           implicates him,  that is,  which confirms  is some           material particular not only the evidence that the           crime  has  been  committed,  but  also  that  the           prisoner committed  it.  The  test  applicable  to           determine   the   nature   and   extent   of   the           corroboration is  thus the  same whether  the case           falls within the rule of practice at common law or           within  that   class   of   offences   for   which           corroboration is required by statute".      In  Halsbury’s  (IV  Edition  Vol.  II  para  454)  the following passage obtains:           "Corroboration of  a witness’s  testimony must  be           afforded by independent evidence which affects the           defendant by  connecting or tending to connect him           with the  offence charged.  It  must  be  evidence           which implicates  him,  that  is  which  tends  to           confirm in  some material particular not only that           the offence  was  committed,  but  also  that  the           defendant committed it".      12. As  to  independent  nature  of  the  corroboration learned Chief Justice observed in Bhaskerville case:           " ..  Again, the  corroboration must  be  by  some           evidence other  than that  of an  accomplice,  and           therefore  one   accomplice’s  evidence   is   not           corroboration  of   the   testimony   of   another           accomplice: Rex v. Noakes .. "      As to the extent of the requisite reassurance by way of corroboration, learned Chief Justice said:           " .. .It is sufficient if there is confirmation as           to a material circumstance of the crime and of the           identity of  the accused in relation to the crime.           Parke B  gave this  opinion as a result of twenty-           five years’ practice; it was accepted by the other           judges; and  has been  much relied  upon in  later

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         cases .. " 756           " ....  Indeed,  if  it  were  required  that  the           accomplice A  should be  confirmed in every detail           of the  crime, his evidence would not be essential           to the  case it  would be  merely confirmatory  of           other and  independent testimony  .... " (page 664           in Rex v. Bhaskerville)      In Halsbury’s Laws of England-IV Edn.-Vol. II-page 268- this proposition is stated thus:           "The word  ’corroboration’ is not a technical term           of art;  it means  by itself no more than evidence           tending to  confirm, support  or strengthen, other           evidence .. "           " ...  .The  corroboration  need  not  consist  of           direct evidence  that the  defendant committed the           offence nor  need it amount to confirmation of the           whole account  given by the witness, provided that           it corroborates  the  evidence  in  some  respects           material to  the charge under consideration. It is           sufficient if it is circumstantial evidence of the           defendant’s connection  with the  offence, but  it           must be  independent evidence,  and  must  not  be           vague      However there  were some  observations in  Director  of Public Prosecutions  v. Killbourne  (1973) Appeal  A.C.  729 which tended  towards a  departure from  the rule  in Rex v. Bhaskerville. In Killbourne case Lord Hailsham said-and this is also the statement of the law in Halsbury-IV Edition           "Evidence which  is admissible,  relevant  to  the           evidence requiring corroboration and (if believed)           conformatory  of   that  evidence  in  a  material           particular, is capable of being corroborative and,           when believed, is corroboration".      The above  passage was  not wholly  in consonance  with what Lord Reading had earlier said:           ".... For  example confirmation does not mean that           there should be independent evidence of that which           the accomplice  relates, or his testimony would be           unnecessary Reg v. Mullins ( 1) per Maule J ...."      But, in  R. v. Beck., [ 1982] 1 All ER 807 (CA), it was reiterated  by   way  of  clarification  that  corroborating evidence need not relate to 757 the particular  evidence spoken to by a suspect-witness, and that it  was merely independent testimony which confirmed in some material  particular not only the evidence that a crime had been  committed but  also that  the  accused-person  had committed it. Referring to the statement of Lord Hailsham in Killbourne case, All England law reports 1982(1) page 815(g) it was observed:           "The learned editors of Archbold para 1416, after,           in  our   judgment  correctly,  stating  that  the           corroborative evidence  need  not  relate  to  the           particular incident  or incidents spoken to by the           "suspect witness",  express the  view  that  ’Lord           Hailsham’s dictum  that the corroborative evidence           must  be   "relevant  to  the  evidence  requiring           corroboration" may be misleading’. We agree. We do           not think that Lord Hailsham LC was expressing any           support for  the proposition  of counsel  for  the           appellant." The position  of  law  in  Rex  v.  Bhaskerville  was,  thus restored.      13. However,  a  marked  tendency  in  England  towards

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arresting the  formalism in  regard to the specific words to be used  to caution the jury against the danger of accepting the  testimony  of  the  uncorroborated  accomplice  is  now discernible. In  R. v.  Spencer [  1986 2  All ER  928]  the grievance of  the convicted person was that the trial judge, in cautioning  the jury,  failed to use the word ’dangerous’ in describing  the risks of injustice involved in convicting a person  on the  testimony of an uncorroborated accomplice. The Court  of appeal  and the House of Lords declined to set aside-the verdict  and said  that the  summing  up  did  not involve  some  legalistic  ritual  to  be  incanted  in  the summing-up.      However,  in  regard  to  the  quality  and  extent  of corroboration, in R. v. Donat, [19861 2 Cr. App. R. 1973, it was reiterated  that to  count as  corroboration, it  is not enough  that   a  piece  of  evidence  merely  supports  the accomplice’s   credibility,    however,   convincingly   and independently; but it must go a little further and implicate the accused.  (See All  England Reports:  Annual Review 1986 page 158).      14. In Sharvana Bhavan v. State of Madras, (AIR 1966 SC 1273 the  corroboration was  held to  be of  two kinds:  the first belonging  to the area of reassurance of the credit of the approver  himself as  a  trustworthy  witness;  and  the second-which  arises  for  conclusion  after  the  court  is satisfied about  the credibility  of the  approver-as to the corroboration  in  material  particulars  not  only  of  the commission of the 758 crime but also of the complicity of other accused-persons in the crime.  If on  the first area the court is not satisfied the  second   stage  does   not  Arise.   The  position   is attractively presented  in Halsbury:-  (IV Edition  Vol. II) Page 268.           "Corroboration is required or afforded only if the           witness  requiring   or  giving  it  is,otherwise,           credible; if testimony falls of its own inanition,           the question  of his  needing or  being capable of           giving, corroboration does not arise."      However, the  two areas  of corroboration  are not  two separate, water-tight  compartments. The evidence as a whole will have  to be  examined  to  reach  conclusions  on  both aspects.      In Attorney  General of  Hongkong v.  Wong Muko Ping, [ 1987] 2 W.L.R. 1033. Lord Bridge of Harwich speaking for the Judicial Committee of the Privy-council said:           ".... It  is said  that this two stage approach is           implicitly indicated  by passages from speeches in           the  House   of  Lords   in  two  of  the  leading           authorities".           " .....  The presence  or absence  of corroborated           evidence may  assist a jury to resolve, one way or           the other,  their doubts  as to  whether or not to           believe the  evidence of  a  suspect  witness,  it           must, in  their Lordship’s  Judgment, be  wrong to           direct  them   to   approach   the   question   of           credibility in  two stages  as  suggested  in  the           submission made on behalf of the defendant."      15. The controversy in the present case in the ultimate analysis, belongs to the second area, whether the approver’s testimony as  to appellant’s  complicity in  the  conspiracy could  safely   be  held   to  have   been  corroborated  by independent evidence on the material particulars      The facts  that require  sequentially to be established are that appellant’s married life was in a serious disarray:

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that she  and Nand  Singh were on terms of illicit intimacy; that she  also submitted herself to Ram Sarup (P.W. 2) in an ex-marital relation;  that on  13.11.1973 she  implored Nand Singh and  Ram Sarup  to free  her from  a cruel  husband by doing away with him; that she agreed that she would, 759 thereafter, live  with Nand Singh as his wife and that after coming to  know of  Pritam Singh’s  death  she  deliberately missed her  mother-in-law,  Mukhtiar  Kaur  (P.W.  19)  into making  a   report  to   the  police  containing  false  and misleading information  in an  attempt to draw a red-herring across the trial.      The evidence  of P.Ws.  17 & 18 on the first two points has been  discarded by  the sessions  court. It  is not also suggested that  after the  murder of Pritam Singh, appellant began to  live with  Nand Singh.  There was  a  considerable lapse of  time between  the death  of Pritam Singh and their arrest.  There   is  no   evidence  to  show  that,  in  the interregnum, there was any liasion between the two.      16. There  is yet  another impediment  in accepting the evidence on an important area of the alleged conspiracy. The incriminating circumstances  in the evidence of the approver appearing against  the appellant  had had  to be  put to the appellant in  her examination under Section 313 Cr. P.C. The incriminating testimony  of the  approver pertaining  to the case that  on 13.11.1973  appellant wept  and implored  Nand Singh and  Ram Sarup  to do  away with Pritam Singh and that appellant also  agreed that she would, thereafter, live with Nand Singh  has not  been put to the appellant in the course of her  examination under Section 313 Cr. P.C. Appellant was not afforded  an opportunity to submit an explanation to it. That part  of the evidence must for that reason, be excluded from consideration (See Harizan Mogha: 1979 3 SCR 474).      17. On a consideration of the entire matter, it appears to  us  that  the  approver’s  evidence  in  regard  to  the complicity  of   the  appellant   in  the  conspiracy  lacks corroboration on  certain material  particulars necessary to connect the  appellant. A  little more  reassurance than  is afforded by  the State  of evidence  in the case is perhaps, necessary  to   convict   appellant.   Appellant,   in   the circumstances would be entitled to the benefit of doubt.      18. At  the time  of the commission of the offence, the appellant, even  on the  basis of  the observations, made by the session  court, was  about 15«  years of  age and  was a "child" within  the meaning  of East  Punjab Children’s  Act 1949. The relevant date is the date of the commission of the offence. Section 27 of the Act provides:           "27. Sentences  that may  not be  passed on child-           Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained           in any law, 760           no person  who as  a child  at  the  date  of  the           commission of  the offence  shall be  sentenced to           death or  transported or  committed to  prison for           any offence  or in  default of  payment  of  fine,           damages or costs:           Provided that a child who is fourteen years of age      or upwards  may be  committed to prison where the court      certifies that  he is  of so unruly or of so depraved a      character that  he is  not fit  person to  be sent to a      certified school  and that none of the other methods in      which the case may legally be dealt with is suitable".      The sessions court has invoked the proviso and has held that appellant  was so depraved a character that none of the other methods  in which the case could legally be dealt with

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is suitable  in her  case. An examination of the legality or propriety of the procedure adopted in the case in the matter of the  trial of  a ’child’ under the East Punjab Children’s Act 1949  and as  to the  correctness of  the  view  of  the sessions court in appealing to the proviso to Section 27 and in sentencing  appellant to imprisonment for life may not be necessary  in  this  case,  in  view  of  our  finding  that appellant is entitled to the benefit of doubt.      19. In the result, this appeal is allowed and while the conviction and  sentence of  the other non-appealing accused is left  undisturbed, the  conviction and  sentence  of  the appellant is  set aside  and appellant is directed to be set at liberty forthwith. N.P.V.                                      Appeal allowed. 761