18 March 1998
Supreme Court
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GEORGE & ORS. Vs STATE OF KERALA & ANR.

Bench: M.K. MUKHERJEE,SYED SHAH MOHAMMED QUADRI
Case number: Appeal Criminal 1921 of 1996


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PETITIONER: GEORGE & ORS.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: STATE OF KERALA & ANR.

DATE OF JUDGMENT:       18/03/1998

BENCH: M.K. MUKHERJEE, SYED SHAH MOHAMMED QUADRI

ACT:

HEADNOTE:

JUDGMENT:                       J U D G M E N T M. K. MUKHERJEE, J.      George  @   Vakkachan,  Rajeev  and  Joshy,  the  three appellants before  us (arrayed  as A1 to A3, respectively in the trial  Court and  hereinafter so referred to) along with four others,  (A4 to  A7) were  put up  for trial  before an Additional Sessions  Judge, Kottayam to answer charges under Section 143,  147, 148,  449, and  302 read with Section 149 I.P.C. The  gravamina of  the charges  were that  on May 28, 1990 at  or about  11 P.M.  they formed  themselves into  an unlawful assembly  with the  common object of committing the murder of  Sasidharan Nair  and in  prosecution thereof they trespassed into his house and hacked him to death. The trial ended in acquittal of all of them; and aggrieved thereby the respondent-State of Kerala filed an appeal and Smt. Sarojini Amma (mother  of the  deceased) filed  a  revision  petition before the High Court. The High Court also issued a suo motu Rule calling  upon the  seven acquitted person to show cause why  their   acquittal  persons  to  show  cause  why  their acquittal should  not be  set aside.  All the  matters  were heard together  by the  High Court; and by a common judgment it set  aside the  acquittal of  the  three  appellants  and convicted them under Sections 302, real with Section 34, and 449 I.P.C,  while affirming the acquittal of others. For the above convictions  the High  Court sentenced each of them to suffer imprisonment  for life  and rigorous imprisonment for five years respectively, with a direction that the sentences shall run concurrently. The above judgment of the High Court is  under  challenge  in  these  appeals  preferred  by  the appellants under Section 2 of the Supreme Court (Enlargement of Criminal  Appellate Jurisdiction)  Act read  with Section 379 Cr.P.C. (2)   Briefly stated, the prosecution case is as under:- (a)   The  deceased Sasidharan  Nair was  a petty trader and lived in  Pulickel of  Pallikkathodu Police  Station. He was also  a  reporter  for  ‘Thaniniram’  daily  published  from Kottayam. On  May 19,  1990 a new item appeared in the daily [Ext. P.  31 (a)]  in which  serious imputations  were  made against high placed police officers of Kottayam district and one Thadivakkan was a pimp and gunda and had great influence

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over corrupt  police officers  to whom he supplied women and wine and  under cover  of their  protection carried  on  his immoral activities  unabashedly in  Palai town. Thadivakkan, who was  none other  than A1,  was upset  and enraged by the above defamatory  publication. He, therefore, along with the other six  accused person  went to the house of the deceased armed with  deadly weapons to kill him on the fateful night. The  three  appellants  entered  into  the  room  where  the deceased was  sleeping with  his wife  (P.W.2) and child and started assaulting him. While A2 and A3 dealt blows upon him with stick  and iron  rod, A1  stabbed him  with a knife. On that very  night while  on the  way to  the Medical  College Hospital, Kottayam, he succumbed to his injuries. (b)   P.W.1.  (Ninan Varghese), a neighbour of the deceased, who had  rushed to  the scene  of  offence  on  hearing  the commotion,  was   told  by  the  deceased  that  Urulikunnam Vakkachan had  stabbed him  with knife. Next morning he went to Pallikkathodu  Police Station  and gave  a report  of the incident (Ext.  P.1) which was recorded by P.W. 30 (Thomas), a  Sub-Inspector   of  police;  and  thereupon  a  case  was registered against A1 and three unidentified persons. P.W.54 (M.  Samuel),  Deputy  Superintendent  of  Police,  took  up investigation and went to the Medical College Hospital where the dead  body of  Sasi was  lying. After holding inquest he sent the  dead body  to the  Forensic Science Department for post-mortem examination  which was  conducted by P.W.51 (Dr. Velayudhan). (c)   P.W.54  then went  to the  house of  the deceased  and seized among  other  articles,  a  knife  (M.O.1),  a  blood smeared cross  beam of  bed stead  (M.O.2), a  show, a blood stained lungi  and some  scalp hairs.  He continued with the investigation till  May 31,  1990 and  then entrusted  it to P.W.52 (Abraham  Mathew), Circle  Inspector of  Pampadi, who seized a  car bearing registration No. KEK 3114 in which the accused had  gone to  commit the  murder. Investigation  was again taken over by P.W.54 and he arrested A2 and A3. At the instance of  A2 a  stick (M.O.3)  was seized  from a  bamboo cluster on  the side  of the  Pallikkathodu-Chengalam  Road. Later on  he arrested  A1 on  June 7, 1990. On completion of investigation P.W.  54 submitted  charge sheet  against  the accused persons. 3.   The  appellants  pleaded  not  guilty  to  the  charges levelled against  them and  contended  that  they  had  been falsely implicated  at the  instance of  the police.  A1, on being examined  under Section  313  Cr.  P.C.,  stated  that P.W.50 (Sreekumar), the driver of car No. KEK 3114, had made a false  statement before  the  Magistrate  (recorded  under Section 164 Cr. P.C.) due to threst by the police. According to him  prior to  the examination  of P.W.50  in  Court  his brother was  caught by  the police  at Thiruvalla  with some ganja in his car and to get his brother exonerated from that case he gave false evidence at the instance of P.W.54. 4.   In support  of its  case the  prosecution  examined  54 witnesses and  the appellants  none. However, the appellants exhibited some documents in support of their defence. 5.   To  give   an  ocular   version  of  the  incident  the prosecution sought to rely upon the evidence of P.Ws2 and 3, the wife  and mother  of the  deceased respectively, both of whom had  during investigation claimed to have witnessed the entire  incident.   P.W.2,  however,  did  not  support  the prosecution case  and was  declared hostile.  She  testified that she  woke up  from sleep  on hearing noise and saw some persons going  away from  their  room  after  attacking  her husband. In  the next breath she stated that she did not see the incident  nor could  she identify the intruders as there

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was no  light either in her room or in the neighbouring room where her mother-in-law was sleeping. 6.    P.W.3  (Sarojini Amma),  however, fully  supported the case of  the prosecution. P.W.3 stated that the deceased was her only  son with  whom she and her husband were staying at the elevant  time. On  that fateful  day her  son came  home around 9  P.M., had his food and went to sleep. She remained awake, keeping  a lamp  burning in her room as was her wont. Some time  later she heard of people running. She then heard the screams  of P.W.2  and Sasi. She rushed towards his room with the lamp, and raising the curtain in between their room saw three  persons standing  inside,  one  standing  at  the doorstep  and  behind  him  two  others  who  were  flashing torches. Of the three who were inside, two were seen beating her son  on his  head with stick and Iron rod. She cried out and implored  them not to kill him; and when he tried to get up one  of the  assailants stabbed  him with  a knife on his right shoulder.  Again he  tried to stab, but her son warded off the  blow  with  his  hand.  Thereafter  the  assailants escaped through  the northern  door. She  heard P.W.2 to ask her husband  about the  intruders and  he named  Urulikunnan Vakkachan. She  and P.W.2  then   cried aloud  to alert  the neighbours. Immediately,  P.W.1 (Ninan),  P.W.4 (Radhamoni), P.W.6  (Joseph   @  Ouseph),  P.W.7  (Aravindakshan),  P.W.8 (Moni), P.W.9  (James)  and  P.W.10  (Ayyappan)  and  others rushed to  the house. P.W.1 was heard to ask her son whether he could identify the assailants. Again she heard him saying that he  was stabbed  by Urulikunnan  Vakkachan. Around 1.00 A.M. he  was taken  to the  Medical College  Hospital  in  a vehicle and in the early morning she heard that he died. She identified A1  as the  person who had stabbed her son and A2 and A3  as those  who assaulted him with stick and iron rod. She could not identify those outside the room, but said that there was sufficient light in the room, shed by the lamp she held and  by the  torches the intruders had, to identify the persons who hit and stabbed her son. 7.   P.W.1, who,  amongst the  neighbours, came to the house of the  deceased first  on hearing the cries, stated that he saw Sasi  lying in  a pool  of blood.  He, however,  did not support the  version of  P.W.3 that  Sasi named  one of  the assailants. On the contrary, he stated that he asked Sasi as to what  happened but  he did  not say  anything. As regards lodging of  the F.I.R  (Ext.P.1) his version was that he had gone to  the police  station on  the following  morning  and given  an   information  about  the  incident  but  the  Sub Inspector (P.W.30)  did not  record it. According to him, he left the  police station  after half  an hour.  He,  however stated that  in the  afternoon he  again went  to the police station on  being summoned  by P.W.30  and made to sign on a paper but  he did not know what was written therein. At that state of  his deposition  he was declared hostile and cross- examined with  reference to the F.I.R. he lodged, wherein he had  stated,   inter  alia,   that  Sasi   told   him   that Irumbikkunnam Vakkachan stabbed him with a knife and that he (Sasi) should be taken at once to hospital. 8.   P.W.4,  another   neighbour,  however,   supported  the prosecution case. She stated that on hearing the screams and cries from the house of Sasi she rushed there along with her husband (P.W.7).  Reaching there  she saw  Sasi  rolling  in blood in the western room of his house. Appaichettan (P.W.1) then asked sasi as to what had happened to him. He said that Irumbikunnam Vakkachan  stabbed him with knife. According to her, at  that time  besides  Sasi’s  wife  and  mother  some neighbours were near him. Then Sasi asked for water from his mother and  told that he would die and he should be taken to

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the hospital. She further stated that Sasi’s mother and wife told them  that 3  persons had  entered into  the  room  and assaulted Sasi,  and another  person had  been showing light from the  door. She  testified that  when she reached there, she saw a burning kerosene lamp in the hand of Sasi’s mother and that  in its  light she  saw Sasi lying bathed in blood. The other neighbours who were examined, namely, P.Ws.5 to 10 did not support the prosecution case fully and hence some of them were declared hostile. 9.   The next  witness whom the prosecution much relied upon is P.W.50,  the driver of the tourist car KEK 3114 in which, according to  the prosecution,  the accused persons had gone to commit  the murder.  He stated  in details as to what had happened in  the night of May 28, 1990. He said A1 hired the taxi to  go to  Pallikkathodu and, as arranged, at 7.00 P.M. A5 came  and got  into it.  He drove  along the T.B. Road as directed by him and on the way from near the Star Studio, A6 and A7 boarded the car. Then he took it to Seema Lodge, from where A1  got in. The car was taken to Paika side and on the way from near Kurusupally, A4 got into it. The car again was taken to the house of A1, from where A2 and A3 also boarded. Around 8.00  p.m. they  reached Pallikkathodu  road junction and then  went to Kayyoori Junction, where all alighted. A1, A3 and  A7 went  towards the house of Kayyoori Appachan, but returned soon. They then proceeded to Pallikkathodu and then to Chengalam  road. After  covering a distance of 2 furlongs he stopped  the car  and except  A6, all of them got out. A1 and another were seen ging along a pathway but returned soon and got  into the  car, which was later stopped at Sarvathra junction. All except A7 alighted there. A2 and A3 had sticks (M.O.3 and  M.O.4) and  A4 and A5 had torches. A7 then asked him to  drive the  car around  the place.  After sometime he brought back  the vehicle  to Sarvathra  junction. A  little later all  the six persons who had gone out returned and got into the  car. According  to him  he felt the smell of blood when they  came. He  then drove  off the vehicle to Palal as directed by them. On the way he switched on the light inside the car  and saw  stains of blood on the shirt and dhothi of A1 and  asked him what the matter was about, when he replied that they had gone to thrash a person. He also heard some of them saying  that the knife and shoe were lost in the place. Later, he  dropped them near their respective places. Before leaving A1  told him  to collect  the fare from his shop the next day  and  not  to  disclose  anything  to  anyone.  He, however, contacted  P.W.31 (Suresh),  his brother  the  same night and  told what had happened. On the following day they met Kunjumon, the owner of the car, and as per his advice he and his  brother went  to the  Pampadi  Police  Station  and disclosed the incident. 10.  Next we  come to the evidence of P.W.51, the doctor who held the  post-mortem examination  and found  27 ante-mortem injuries on  the person  of Sasi.  Of those injuries, injury No.1 was  a lacerated wound, scalp deep, over the right side of the  head. The  underneath brain showed diffused subdural and  subarachnoid   haemorrhage   with   signs   of   raised intracranial tension.  The doctor opined that the injury was sufficient in  the ordinary  course of nature to cause death and the  deceased died due to it. He further opined that the above injury  could be caused by a weapon like MO 3 (stick). Injuries No.  6 and 12 were incised wounds: one on the right side of chest cutting through the muscle plane downwards for a depth  of 7  cms and the other on the front of right upper arm. Those injuries, according to P.W.51, could be caused by a weapon like MO.1 (knife). Injury Nos. 2 to 5, 9, 10, 16 to 20, 22,  25 and 27 were abrasions. The doctor said that some

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of the  above injuries  could be caused by the tip of Mos. 3 and 4  (iron rod).  Injury Nos.  7, 8  and 24  were  abraded contusions which  could be  caused by  a weapon  like MO. 3. Injury Nos.  11, 13,  14, 15,  23 and 26 were contusions and according to  the doctor  those injuries  could be caused by MO.4. 11. From the above narration of the prosecution case and the evidence  adduced  in  support  thereof  we  find  that  the prosecution  sought   to  prove   the  following  facts  and circumstances to bring home the charges levelled against the accused: (i) the  six accused  persons  came  to  the  house  of  the      deceased on  that  fateful  night  and  three  of  them      entered inside  his bed  room and  assaulted  him  with      different weapons.  Those three,  who entered  into the      bed room  and actually  assaulted him,  were A1, A2 and      A3, (the appellants before us); (ii) the  deceased made  an oral  dying  declaration  before      P.Ws.l3 and  4 to  the effect  that A1  was amongst the      assailants; (iii) the  deceased died  owing to the injuries sustained at      the hands of the assailants; (iv) the  appellants  along  with  the  other  four  accused      persons came  to the  house of  the deceased  in a  car      bearing registration  No. KEK 3114 and after committing      the murder returned in the same vehicle; and (v) A1  had a  motive to  commit the  murder as the deceased      had, ten  days earlier,  reported about  his  nefarious      activities in the ‘Thaniniram’ daily. 12.  From the  record we  notice that  the defence  did  not dispute that  the deceased  was found lying with a number of bleeding injuries on his person in the bed room on his house in the  night of  May 28,  1990 and  that on  the way to the hospital he succumbed to those injuries. Even otherwise, the evidence of  P.W.1, P.W.4  and other neighbours unmistakably proves these  facts. The  nature of  injuries found  on  the person of  the deceased  and the opinion of P.W.51 as to the manner how the injuries could be sustained also prove, in no uncertain terms,  that more  that one person was responsible for the  murder. In the context of the above facts the trial Court proceeded  to consider  whether the  deceased met with his  homicidal   death  in   the  manner   alleged  by   the prosecution. 13.  For that  purpose the  trial Court  first took  up  for discussion the  evidence of P.W.3, the sole eye witness, and rejected her  claim that  she had  seen the  incident by the light of  the kerosene  lamp which  was burning  in her room with the following observations:      "The explanation  offered by  PW  3      for keeping the lighted lamp in her      room instead  of keeping  it in the      other room  is  not  reasonable  or      convincing. Therefore,  the version      of PW3  that she had kept a lighted      lamp in her room and it is with the      said lamp  that she  rushed to  the      scene of  occurrence is  improbable      and unbelievable.  She  might  have      lighted the  lamp after hearing the      hue and  cry from  the nearby  room      and gone to the scene room with the      lamp. But the assailants would have      escaped from  there by the time. If      that be  so she  might not have the      opportunity to  see the incident or

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    identify   the   assailants.   Even      assuming that  PW3 had  gone to the      scene  with   a  kerosene  lamp  as      spoken to  by her it cannot be said      that  she   was  able  to  see  the      incident or  identify the culprits.      According  to   her,   the   entire      incident occurred  just  after  her      arrival at the scene of occurrence.      The lamp which is said to have been      taken  with  PW3  is  a  small  one      without any covering glass. If such      a lamp  is  taken  to  a  place  of      turmoil  as  in  present  case  one      cannot  keep  it  burning  all  the      while as there is every possibility      of getting  it extinguished  within      no time  due to the movement of the      lamp in  the hands  of  the  person      carrying it.  To  keep  it  burning      till the  end of  the incident  one      should keep  it away from the scene      of occurrence.  In that  case there      may not  be sufficient  light  from      the lamp  to see  the  incident  or      identify the  culprits at the scene      of occurrence. More over when there      is attack  with deadly weapons such      as knife,  stick, iron rod etc. one      may not  dare to go near the scene.      In the  instant case it is doubtful      as to  whether PW3  had gone to the      scene at  all. If that be so, there      would  not   have  been  sufficient      light at the scene of occurrence in      which the incident could be seen by      this witness especially when she is      of 62 years." 14.  Then, assuming that she had seen the assault, the trial Court posed  the question  whether she  could  identify  the assailants and  answered the  same in  the negative with the following words:      "If P.W.3 had been holding the lamp      at a little distance from the scene      of occurrence  she would  not  have      identified the  accused  especially      when they  are utter  strangers  to      her. It  is to test the veracity of      the witness  on the question of his      capacity   to    identify   unknown      persons whom  the witness  may have      seen  only   once,  that  the  test      identification parade  is  insisted      upon. It  is to  be noted  that  to      identify  the  accused  during  the      examination  of   PW3  before  this      Court she had to step down from the      box and  go near  the dock with the      permission  of   the   court.   The      difficulty shown  by the witness in      identifying  in   the  witness  box      would indicate  that she  is having      defective vision  either due to old      age or  for some other reason. This      witness has  stated that  no police

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    office had shown the accused to her      at any  time. At  the same time she      has  admitted   to  have  seen  the      accused in  the  dock  on  the  day      previous to  her examination. It is      therefore clear  that she  had  the      opportunity    of     seeing    and      identifying the  accused (At to A3)      before  they   were  identified  in      court.    While    reminding    the      necessity  of  test  identification      parades in  cases where the accused      are not  known to the witnesses the      Supreme Court in Kanan Vs. State of      Kerala (AIR  1979 SC 1127) observed      that where  a witness identifies an      accused who  is not known to him in      court  for   the  first  time,  his      evidence  is  absolutely  valueless      unless there  has been  a  previous      identification parade  to test  his      power   of   observation.   If   no      identification parade  is held then      it will be wholly unsafe to rely on      his hare  testimony  regarding  the      identification of  an  accused  for      the  first  time  in  Court.  I  am      therefore  of   opinion  that   the      evidence of PW 3 who claims to have      identified A1  to A3  in court  for      the first time is unreliable in the      absence  of   test   identification      parade." 15.  The oral  dying declaration of the deceased about which P.Ws.3 and  4 testified was discarded by the trial Court as, according to  it, the  same was tainted with infirmities and inherent improbabilities.  In drawing the above interference it observed  that Ext.P.1  which was  lodged  by  P.W.1  and wherein he  had stated about the above dying declaration was a suspicious document and, therefore, the story of the dying declaration allegedly made in presence of P.Ws.1,3 and 4 was also suspicious.  The  other  reason  for  disbelieving  the testimonies of  P.Ws.3 and  4 in  this regard  was that  the neighbours  who  accompanied  P.W.4  to  the  house  of  the deceased had  categorically stated that the deceased did not say anything  when P.W.1  asked him  about the  incident and consequently they  could not  have heard the deceased saying that he was stabbed by the appellant. The third and the last reason to  disbelieve the  dying declaration  was that P.W.3 did not  disclose about  it to  any of  the persons  who had assembled there. 16.   The  trial Court  then took  up for  consideration the evidence of P.W.50 and disbelieved his evidence primarily on the ground  that through  in the  trip sheet  of the vehicle (Ext. P.54  a) the  place of  departure and place of arrival were shown, the name of the person who performed the journey was not  there. Besides,  the trial  Court observed,  P.W.31 (Suresh) was shown as the registered owner of the vehicle in Ext. P.54 but P.W.50 was the registered owner. In absence of any other evidence the trial Court held that it could not be said on  the basis of Ext. P.54 that it was A1 who performed the journey  on May 28, 1990. While on this point, the trial Court also found that the contention of A1 that under police coercion P.W.50 was compelled to give a statement before the Magistrate  under   Section  164   Cr.P.C.  (Ext.P.42)   was

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probable. 17.   The  trial Court lastly dealt with the motive ascribed to A1  for  committing  the  murder  in  the  light  of  the contention raised on his behalf that Thadivakkan referred to in Ext.  P.31 was not A1 (Urulikunnam Vekkachan) and held it to be  insufficient and  weak. The  reason  therefor  is  as under:-      "It  is   true  that  there  is  no      evidence on  record  to  show  that      Thadi   Vakkan   referred   to   in      Ext.P.31   (a)    as    Urulikunnam      Vekkachan. Even  assuming it  to be      so it  cannot be said that Ext P.31      would cause  any provocation to A1.      On the  other hand the image of the      person who  is referred to as Thadi      Vakkan on  account of  his  alleged      association with  the  high  police      officers in  Kottayam  District  is      boosted by  the publication of Ext.      P.31 (a)  news item.  At  the  same      time the  reputation  of  the  high      police   officials    in   Kottayam      District        (referred        as      Superintendents in  the news  item)      has  been  tarnished  by  the  said      publication. Therefore  the persons      who are  really aggrieved  by  Ext.      P.31(a)   are   the   high   police      officials in Kottayam District." With the  above findings  and observations  the trial  Court acquitted all the accused persons. 18.  Coming now to the impugned judgment, we notice that the High Court first detailed the evidence of P.W.3 so far as it related to  her having witnessed the incident and identified the assailants and then made the following observations:      "Though 62  years old  at the time of the incident, her      faculties were  intact and vision normal/unimpaired. No      doubt the  intruders were  strangers to  her;  but  she      claimed to  have identified  them in  the light shed by      her lamp  as also the torches, during those moments her      son was  belaboured and  attacked and  reached  to  the      scene in  a spontaneous  and natural  manner.  She  had      given a  graphic account of what had taken place in the      room, which had hardly the shades of a tutored version.      The scene not only shocked her but had left its imprint      upon her  mind, that  she recalled  effortlessly at the      trial." 19.  The High  Court then  adverted to the reasons canvassed by the  trial Court  for disbelieving P.W.3 (quoted earlier) and made the following comments:      "There was  nothing to suspect that      she kept  a light burning since she      said that she usually went to sleep      between 12  - 1.00  a.m. Yes!  that      accorded with  the practice of some      old people  who  sleep  late.  That      there was no lamp in the room where      the     deceased      slept     was      understandable since  his wife  and      child slept by his side.           The court  below has  observed      that as  she rushed to the room the      lamp she  had  perhaps  would  have      been  blown   off  since   it   was

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    uncovered and  that if  would  have      been impossible  for  her  to  have      seen anything in the total darkness      that existed.  The said observation      seemed to have come out of distrust      of her  version and  amounted to  a      piece of  imaginative exercise that      was inappropriate.  The  manner  in      which her  evidence had  been dealt      with leaves  much  to  be  desired.      Having gone  through it  in detail,      we have no doubt about her veracity      that  the   court  below  suspected      without jurisdiction." 20.   The High Court next dealt with the evidence of P.Ws. 3 and 4  regarding the  dying declaration  and concluded  that there was  no reason  to disbelieve  them. In  repelling the contention reiterated  before it on behalf of A1 that he was not the  person referred  to in  the dying  declaration, the High Court  observed that  the evidence  on record including that of  P.Ws. 50 and 54 clearly established that the person named in  the dying declaration and in Ext. P.31 was one and the same,  namely A1.  The High  Court also  held  that  the comments of  the  trial  Court  that  the  name  of  A1  was subsequently inserted  by the  Investigating Officer  in the inquest  report  to  implicate  A1  was  without  any  basis whatsoever. The  High Court lastly held that the evidence of P.W.50  that  the  accused  had  travelled  in  his  car  to Sarvarthra junction,  was wholly  reliable.  Since  however, there was no legal evidence to prove overt acts of A4 to A7, the High Court gave them the benefit of doubt, while setting aside the acquittal of the appellants. 21.  Mr. U.R.  Lalit, the  learned counsel appearing for the appellants, first  submitted that  the impugned judgment was rendered  in   utter  disregard   of  the  well  established principle that for setting aside an order of acquittal it is not enough  for an  appellate Court to take a different view of the  evidence and  there must  also  be  substantial  and compelling reasons  for it  to hold that the Court below was wrong. In  support of  his submission  he  relied  upon  the following passage  from the judgment of this Court in Ramesh Babulal  Doshi   vs.  State   of  Gujarat   [(1996)  Vol.  9 S.C.C.225]:      "This  Court  has  repeatedly  laid      down that the mere fact that a view      other than  the one  taken  by  the      trial  Court  can  be  legitimately      arrived at  by the  appellate Court      on  reappraisal   of  the  evidence      cannot  constitute   a  valid   and      sufficient ground to interfere with      an order  of  acquittal  unless  it      comes to  the conclusion  that  the      entire approach  of the trial Court      in dealing  with the  evidence  was      patently illegal or the conclusions      arrived  at   by  it   were  wholly      untenable.   While    sitting    in      judgment  over   an  acquittal  the      appellate Court  is first  required      to seek  an answer  to the question      whether the  findings of  the trial      Court    are     palpably    wrong,      manifestly       erroneous       or      demonstrably unsustainable.  If the

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    appellate Court  answers the  above      question in  the negative the order      of   acquittal   is   not   to   be      disturbed.   Conversely,   if   the      appellate Court  holds, for reasons      to be  recorded, that  the order of      acquittal   cannot    at   all   be      sustained in  view of  any  of  the      above infirmities it can then - and      then only - reappraise the evidence      to arrive  at its  own conclusions.      In   keeping    with   the    above      principles  we  have  therefore  to      first   ascertain    whether    the      findings of  the  trial  Court  are      sustainable or not." 22.  According to  Mr. Lalit, the reasons given by the trial Court to  acquit the  appellants could  not be  said, by any stretch of  imagination, to  be  palpably  wrong  or  wholly unsustainable so as to entitle the High Court to reverse the same. On  the   contrary, he  submitted, the judgment of the trial Court  was based  on proper and reasonable view of the evidence and  reliance on  law laid  down by  this Court. In elaborating his  arguments on this point Mr. Lalit submitted that it  being the  admitted case  of the  prosecution  that P.W.3 did  not know  the appellants  from before,  the trial Court  was   fully  justified  in  rejecting  her  testimony regarding identification  of the  appellants in  Court,  two years  after   the  incident,   in  absence   of  any   Test Identification (T.I.)  parade held  to  test  her  power  of observation, relying  on the judgment of this Court in Kanan vs. State  of Kerala [(1979) 3 S.C.C.319]. Equally justified was the  Court in  pressing into  service her admission that the appellants  were shown  to her  by the police on the day before she testified in Court for such rejection, argued Mr. Lalit. While  on this point Mr. Lalit further submitted that the High  Court did  not even  advert to  this aspect of the matter while  accepting  the  evidence  of  P.W.3  regarding identification of the appellants in Court as the assailants. 23.  There is some substance in the above contentions of Mr. Lalit; firstly, because the High Court did not deal with and dispose of  the appeal strictly in accordance with the above quoted principles  and secondly,  because the aspect of T.I. parade was  not at  all considered  by the  High Court.  Our endeavour, therefore, will be to reassess the evidence, more so, when  this is  a statutory  appeal, in the light, of the findings of the trial Court. 24.  As noticed  earlier, the trial Court rejected the claim of P.W.3  that she  had seen  the incident in the light of a burning lamp. Apart from the comments made by the High Court (quoted earlier)  for discarding  the finding  of the  trial Court in  this  regard-  which  in  out  opinion  are  fully justified -  we find  that the  relevant statements  made by P.W.4 and  her husband  P.W.7 in  their  evidence  were  not noticed by  the trial  Court as  also by  the High Court. In their  testimony  both  of  them,  who  are  the  next  door neighbours of  the deceased,  categorically stated that when they reached  there (the  house of the deceased) there was a burning kerosene lamp and that it was in its light that they saw Sasi  lying in  a pool  of blood.  Neither of  them  was cross-examined on  this point  nor do  we  find  any  reason whatever to disbelieve them. Indeed, no suggestion, for what it was  worth, was  even put to them that they were deposing falsely. Their  evidence not  only takes the wind out of the sails of  the reasonings  of the  trial Court  regarding the

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existence of the lamp - and, for that matter, of its burning at the  material time  - but fully corroborates the evidence of P.W.3  that  she  saw  the  assault  and  identified  the assailants with  it. Since  the reasoning of the trial Court in this  regard is  based on  non- consideration of material evidence it must be held to be patently wrong. 25.  That brings  us to  the  question  whether  the  ground canvassed by  the trial  Court for rejection of her evidence regarding  identification   of  the  appellants,  whom  she, admittedly, did  not know from before, as the assailants are improper or  not. So  far as  the first ground is concerned, law is  well settled  that identification  of an  accused in Court is  the substantive evidence of the person identifying and his earlier identification in a T.I. parade corroborates the same.  In other  words,  want  of  evidence  of  earlier identification  in   a  T.I.  parade  does  not  affect  the admissibility of the evidence of identification in court. 26.  We may  now consider what will be the effect of failure to  hold   the  T.I.  parade.  In  Kanta  Prasad  vs.  Delhi Administration [1958  S.C.R. 1218] a two Judge Bench of this Court observed as under:      "It  would   no  doubt   have  been      prudent    to     hold    a    test      identification parade  with respect      to witnesses  who did  not know the      accused before  the occurrence, but      failure to hold such a parade would      not take  inadmissible the evidence      of  identification  in  Court.  The      weight  to   be  attached  to  such      identification would  be  a  matter      for the  Courts of  fact and  it is      not for  this Court to reassess the      evidence unless exceptional grounds      were established necessitating such      a course."           (emphasis supplied) (For reasons  earlier stated  exceptional grounds  have been made out in this case to reassess the evidence.) 27.  We may  next refer  to the  case of Harbhajan Singh vs. State of Jammu & Kashmir [(1975) 4 S.C.C. 480], decided by a three  Judge  Bench.  In  that  case  Harbhajan  Singh  (the appellant therein)  alongwith one  Gurmukh Singh  - both  of whom were  members  of  Border  Security  Force  -  absented themselves from their evening parade without obtaining leave and sauntered  into Kangri, armed with two rifles which were issued to them for the performance of their official duties. They first went to the house of one Kashu Ram, demanded eggs from his  wife and  helped themselves  to a  bottle of  rum. Thereafter, they went to the house of the complainant Munshi Ram. While  Gurmukh Singh  mounted guard  at the door of his house the  appellant went  inside. The appellant caught hold of Munshi  Ram’s daughter  Kamla Devi  and began to drag her out of  the house. MUnshi Ram entreated the two intruders to be merciful  but Gurmukh  Singh fired  a shot  at him  which fortunately  missed   its  target.  In  the  confusion  that followed Kamli  Devi managed  to rescue  herself and started running back  to her  house. Thereupon the appellant fired a shot from  his rifle  at her  as a  result of which she died instantaneously. To  prove its  case the  prosecution relied upon the  evidence of Munshi Ram., his wife and a neighbour. This Court  found that  the evidence  of those witnesses was amply corroborated  in the circumstances that on the fateful evening the  appellant and  Gurmukh Singh were absent at the time of  roll call,  that  on  that  night  when  they  were

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arrested their rifles smelt of fresh gun powder and that the empty cartridge case which was found at the scene of offence bore distinctive  markings showing  that  the  bullet  which killed Kamli Devi was fired from the rifle of the appellant. The evidence of Kesuram also showed that after the appellant and another  accused drank  liquor at his house they went to the house of Munshi Ram. An argument raised on behalf of the appellant therein  that the  investigating officer  ought to have held  an identification  parade and that the failure of Munshi Ram  to mention  the names  of the two accused to the neighbours who  came to  the  scene  immediately  after  the occurrence showed  that his  story could  not be  true,  was rejected by  this Court  and the  appeal dismissed  with the following observation:      "As  observed   by  this  Court  in      Jadunath Singh  v. State  of  U.P.,      (1971) 2 SCR 917 = (AIR 1971 SC 363      = 1971  Cri LJ 305) absence of test      identification is  not  necessarily      fatal. The fact that MUnshi Ram did      not disclose  the names  of the two      accused to the villagers only shows      that   the    accused   were    not      previously known  to  him  and  the      story that  the accused referred to      each  other   by  their  respective      names  during  the  course  of  the      incident  contains  an  element  of      exaggeration.  The  case  does  not      rest on  the evidence of Munshi Ram      alone   and    the    corroborative      circumstances  to   which  we  have      referred  to   above  lend   enough      assurance to the implication to the      appellant."           (emphasis supplied) 28.  We need  not however  refer to  the other  cases on the point as  in Surendra  Narain Vs.  State of  U.P. [(1998)  1 S.C.C. 76]  this Court  has, after  considering the  earlier cases of  this Court, including Kannan (supra), on which the trial Court  relied, Kamta  Prasad  (supra)  Jadunath  Singh (supra) and  Harbhajan Singh  (supra), and of different High Courts, held that failure to hold the T.I. parade even after a demand by the accused is not always fatal. 29.  It cannot  be denied  however that  though  not  fatal, absence   of    the   corroborative    evidence   of   prior identification  in  a  T.I.  parade  makes  the  substantive evidence of  identification in  Court after  a long lapse of time a  weak piece of evidence and no reliance can be placed upon it  unless sufficiently and satisfactorily corroborated by other  evidence. We have, therefore, to ascertain whether the other evidence adduced by the prosecution lends implicit assurance  to   the  evidence   of   P.W.3   regarding   her identification of  the appellants  as the assailants. Before adverting to such evidence it would be necessary to refer to the other comments made by Mr. Lalit to the ‘identification’ evidence of  P.W.3. Mr  Lalit submitted that the evidence of P.Ws.3 and  54 clearly  established that the former had seen the  accused  in  the  dock  on  the  day  previous  to  her examination. That necessarily means, according to Mr. Lalit, the  ‘identification’   evidence   of   P.W.3   was   wholly unreliable. Mr.  Lalit further submitted that when the trial Judge had  rejected the evidence of P.W.3 on the question of identification taking  into  consideration  also  the  above admission of  P.W.3 it could not be said that the finding of

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the trial Court was improper so as to justify the High Court to disturb  the same.  On perusal of the relevant portion of the evidence  of P.Ws.3  and 54  we are unable to accept the contention of  P.Ws.3 and  54 we  are unable  to accept  the contention of  Mr. Lalit  nor the finding of the trial Court in that  regard for  the same are based on misreading of the evidence. In  her cross  examination  P.W.3  was  asked  the following question:  "You have  seen the accused standing in the dock,  hadn’t you?"  and her  reply was  "had seen."  In cross examination  of P.W.54  on this  point  the  following answers were elicited:      "No records  have been  produced in      the  Court   to   show   that   the      witnesses   have   recognised   the      accused.  I   have  not   submitted      application     for      conducting      identification      parade      for      recognising  the  accused.  As  the      witnesses   had    identified   the      accused it did not occur that there      was  any  need  for  identification      parade." We are  at a  loss to  understand how  the trial Court could come to  the conclusion that P.W.3 had admitted that she had seen the accused a day before she testified in Court. On the contrary, the  above statement  of P.W.3 does not in any way belie or  weaken the  prosecution case that she had seen the accused on  the day  of the incident and thereafter in Court at the  time she  was being  examined. This apart the answer elicited from  P.W.54 only  indicates that he felt (which in our view  was wholly  wrong) that  as the  witnesses  (which obviously included P.W.50) had identified the accused he did not think  it necessary to pray for T.I. parade. IN any view of the  matter the  above  statements  do  not  support  the submission of  Mr. Lalit  nor the  conclusion drawn  by  the trial Court. 30.  That brings  us to  the dying  declaration made  by the deceased before  P.Ws.3 and  4 which  has been  pressed into service by the prosecution to corroborate the ocular version of P.W.3.  Before proceeding further we must confess that we have not  able to fathom how the trial Court could rely upon the contents  of Ext. P.1, lodged by P.W.1, and that too for the purpose  of discarding  the evidence  of P.Ws.3  and  4. P.W.1 turned  hostile and testified that he did not make any statement before  the police but signed on the dotted lines. It is  trite that  an F.I.R.  is  not  substantive  evidence (unless of  course it is admitted under Section 32(1) of the Evidence Act)  and can  be used to corroborate or contradict the  maker   thereof;  and   therefore,  the   question   of corroborating  P.W.1   by  his   purported  statements,   as contained in  Ext. P.1  could not arise. Inspite thereof the trial Court  observed ‘.......the  first informant statement is further  supported by the evidence of P.W.1’ and used the statements  contained    therein  (Ext.P.1)  as  substantive evidence to  discredit P.Ws.3  and 4. It must, therefore, be said that  the approach  of the  trial Court in dealing with the F.I.R.  was legally impermissible. We are also surprised to find  that the  trial Court  disbelieved  P.Ws.3  and  4, relying upon  the statements contained in an inquest report, to the  extent they relate to what the Investigating Officer saw and  found are admissible but any statement made therein on the  basis of  what he heard from others, would be hit by Section 162 Cr.P.C.. 31.  The whole  purpose of preparing an inquest report under Section 174 (1) Cr.P.C. is to investigate into and draw up a

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report of  the apparent  cause  of  death,  describing  such wounds as  may be  found on  the body  of the  deceased  and stating in  what manner, or by what weapon or instrument, if any, such  wounds appear  to have  been inflicted.  In other words, for  the purpose of holding the inquest it is neither necessary nor  obligatory on  the part  of the Investigating Officer to  investigate  into  or  ascertain  who  were  the persons responsible  into or  ascertain who were the persons responsible for  the death.  In  dealing  with  Section  174 Cr.P.C. in  Podda Narayana  vs.  State  of  A.P.  [(1975)  4 S.C.C.153],  this   Court  held   that  the  object  of  the proceedings thereunder  is merely  to  ascertain  whether  a person died  under suspicious  circumstances or  met with an unnatural death  and, if  so, what  was its  apparent cause. According to  this Court  the question regarding the details how the deceased was assaulted or who assaulted him or under what circumstances  he was assaulted is foreign to the ambit and scope  of such  proceedings. With  the above observation this Court held that the High Court was right (in that case) that the omissions in the inquest report were not sufficient to put the prosecution out of Court. In Eqbal Baiq vs. State of A.P.  [(1986) 2  S.C.C.476] this  Court  observed,  while dealing with a similar question, that the inquest report was not the statement of any person wherein all the names of the persons accused  were to  be mentioned.  On this ground also the finding  of the  trial Court based on the inquest report cannot be sustained. 32.  Now  that  we  have  demonstrated  that  the  principal reasons put  forward by  the trial  Court for discarding the dying declaration  are patently  wrong and  opposed  to  the fundamental principles of criminal jurisprudence, we have to ascertain for  ourselves whether the evidence adduced by the prosecution to  prove the same can be safely relied upon. To prove the  dying declaration  the prosecution  examined some neighbours of  the deceased  namely, P.W.1 and P.Ws.4 to 10, besides his  wife (P.W.2) and mother (P.W.3). Of them P.W.1, P.W.5 and P.Ws.8 to 10 - and even P.W.2 - turned hostile and resiled from  their statements  recorded under  Section  161 Cr.P.C. wherein  they had testified about it. However, P.W.3 averred that  when the  persons who  had assaulted Sasi were gone, Vijayamma  (P.W.2) asked  him who  assaulted and  Sasi said that  it was  Urulikunnam Vakkachan.  The  evidence  of P.W.3 in  this regard  is fully  corroborated by  P.W.4. She stated that  when she  accompanied by  her  husband  (P.W.7) reached Sasi’s  house she  saw him  rolling in  blood in the western room  in their house. P.W.1 then asked Sasi "What is this Sasi?"  Sasi said "Appaichettan" (referring to P.W.1) I know the  man; Urulikunnam  Vakkachan stabbed  with  knife". According to  her at  that time  amongst others Sasi’s wife, mother and  child  were  near  Sasi.  While  discussing  the evidence of  P.W.4 with  reference to  the  burning  of  the kerosene lamp  we have found that she is a truthful witness; and indeed,  we find  no reason to disbelieve this neighbour of the  deceased.  The  evidence  of  dying  declaration  as testified by these two witnesses was criticised by Mr. Lalit on the  ground that  neither the  other neighbours nor P.W.2 spoke about  the same.  The trial  Court also made a similar criticism while  disbelieving the  evidence of P.Ws.3 and 4. We do not, however, find any substance in this criticism. As earlier stated,  except P.Ws.6  and 7 all others examined by the  prosecution   resiled  from   their  statements  during investigation and were declared hostile. So far as the other two neighbours  are concerned namely P.W.6 and P.W.7 we find that the  former stated  that he  did not  hear Sasi  saying anything and  he did  not also  ask Sasi  about the injuries

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that he  sustained. From  the above  statement made  by this witness it  cannot be said that the evidence of P.Ws.3 and 4 stands contradicted  in  any  way.  Had  he  testified  that neither Sasi  nor P.Ws.3  and 4  spoke about  the assailants when asked,  it  would  have,  of  course,  discredited  the statements of P.Ws.3 and 4. It might as well be said that he came at  a later  stage when  Sasi was  not in a position to speak. As  regards P.W.7  no question  regarding  the  dying declaration was  put to  him neither in examination-in-chief or in  cross examination  and consequently his evidence also does not  in any  way discredit the prosecution case. Having carefully gone  through the evidence of P.Ws.3 and 4 we find no justifiable  reason to  disbelieve their  assertion  that Sasi made  a statement  that Urulikunnam  Vakkachan  stabbed him. 33.  Thus  said   we  have   to  ascertain   whether  A1  is Urulikunnam Vakkachan  mentioned by  the deceased,  for much comment has  been made  by the  trial Court  as also  by Mr. Lalit on  this aspect  of the matter. The evidence on record unmistakably proves  that A1  is  a  resident  of  Elikkulam village in  the district  of Kottayam.  From the evidence of P.W.54, we  learn that "Urulikunnam" is a Kara (locality) of that village.  P.W.50 who knew A1 from before testified that he (A1)  is a resident of Urulikunnam; and, again, in answer to a  question put to him in cross examination, he said that he knew  the residence of the accused. When the above pieces of evidence  are put  together and considered in the context of the  fact that  it was  not even  suggested to any of the prosecution witnesses  - much  less elicited  in their cross examination -  that there  was any  other person by the name Vakkachan in Urulikunnam, the conclusion is inescapable that the deceased  referred  to  A1  when  he  named  Urulikunnam Vakkachan as the assailant. 34.  Mr. Lalit,  however, argued that the deceased had named one Thadivakkan,  as the  person who  was in league with the police and  was indulging  in nefarious  activities, in  his report (Ext.  P.31) and not ‘Urulikunnam Vakkachan’ and that necessarily meant  that ‘Thadivakkan’  referred to  in  that report and  ‘Urulikunnam Vakkachan’ referred to in the dying declaration were  not one  and the  same  person.  In  other words, according  to  Mr.  Lalit,  A1  was  not  the  person mentioned in  the dying  declaration. This contention of Mr. Lalit and  the finding  recorded by  the trial Court to that effect is devoid of merit. The newspaper report (Ext. P-31a) refers to  a person  who belongs  to  Elikkulam  village  in Kottayam district and has the sobriquet ‘Thadivakkan’. There is, therefore,  no confusion  in the  identity, for while in the report  the deceased  had given  the  sobriquet  of  the deceased along  with  the  name  of  the  village  where  he resides, in  his dying  declaration he  gave out the name by which he  is  known  to  all,  including  P.W.50,  and  also addresses himself.  Both motive  of A1  for  committing  the murder as  also his  identity as  one of the participants in the murder thus stand established. 35.  Even if  we were to assume that the person named in the report (Ext.P.31) referred to someone other than A1 it would not have  affected in any way the prosecution case regarding the identity  of A1  as one of the assailants in view of our earlier findings based on the evidence of P.Ws. 3 and 4, for it would  have only  meant that  the prosecution  failed  to prove the  motive ascribed  to A1 for committing the murder. To put  it differently,  once it  is established that A1 was amongst the  miscreants  the  proof  of  motive  pales  into insignificance. Besides,  it may  as well  be, that  being a villager of  Elikkulam village  with similarity of names, A1

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thought that  the news  item referred to him and, therefore, he decided  to commit the murder of the reporter, namely the deceased. In  any view  of the matter, the identity of A1 as one of the assailants, as stated in the dying declaration of Sasi, cannot be doubted. 36.  We may  now turn  to the  evidence of  P.W.50, detailed earlier. From the judgment of the trial Court we notice that the substantial  parts of its comments, (quoted earlier) are based on  his statement  recorded under  Section 164 Cr.P.C. and not  his evidence  in  Court.  The  said  statement  was treated as  substantive evidence;  as would  be evident from the  following,  amongst  other  observations  made  by  the learned trial Court:-      "If  Ext.   P.42   (the   statement      recorded under Section 164 Cr.P.C.)      is found  to be a genuine statement      it can  be  used  as  an  important      piece of  evidence to  connect  the      accused with the crime". In making  the above  and similar  comments the  trial Court again ignored  a fundamental  rule of criminal jurisprudence that a  statement of  a witness  recorded under  Section 164 Cr.P.C. cannot  be used  as substantive  evidence and can be used only  for the purpose of contradicting or corroborating him. Instead  of appreciating  the evidence  of P.W.50  from that perspective  the trial  Court  confined  its  attention mainly to  his statement  so recorded  and discredited  him. This legal  infirmity apart,  factually also the trial Court committed patent  errors. As  earlier noticed,  one  of  the grounds for  disbelieving him was that in the trip sheet the name of the person who performed the journey, namely, A1 was not shown.  If the  trial Court  had cared  to look into the other trip sheets which form part of Ext. P.54 it would have found that  in none of them the name of the person who hired the car is mentioned. The trial Court was, therefore, not at all justified  in commenting upon such non-mentioning of the name of the hirer and concluding therefrom that the document was suspect.  The comments  of the  trial Court  that P.W.50 made the  statement before  the Magistrate  (Ext.  P.42)  to oblige the  police as his brother was arrested in connection with an excise case is also without any basis whatsoever. In drawing  the  above  inference  the  trial  Court  was  much influenced by the fact that the car in question, namely, KEK 3114 was  seized by the police May 31, 19920 and that it was released on  June 28,  1990. According to the trial Court it was wrongfully detained by the police for such a long period to compel  P.W.50 to  make  a  statement  according  to  its dictate. Once  a car  is seized in connection with a case it can be  returned pursuant  to the order of a competent Court only and there is nothing on record to indicate that inspite of such  an order  the car was not returned so as to entitle the trial  Court to  comment that  the long detention of the car  was  itself  a  suspicious  circumstance.  Having  gone through the  evidence of  P.W.50 we  find that  each of  the reasons canvassed by the trial Court for disbelieving P.W.50 is either legally unsustainable or factually incorrect. 37.  The evidence  of P.W.50  goes to prove that his vehicle was hired by A1 and all the accused persons including A1 had gone in  his vehicle and got down at Sarvathra junction. His evidence, therefore,  is an incriminating circumstance, more so when  we find  that the  house of  the deceased  was at a distance of 150 mtrs. from that junction. 38.  On a  comprehensive view  of the materials on record we are fully  satisfied that  the prosecution  has been able to prove beyond  all reasonable  doubts that  A1 was  among the

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assailants, as  testified by P.W.3 and fully corroborated by the dying declaration made by the deceased before P.Ws.3 and 4. The  evidence of P.W.50 also lends assurance to the above conclusion we  feel that they are entitled to the benefit of reasonable doubt,  having regard  to  the  fact  that  their identification  in   Court  for   the  first  time  was  not corroborated by  any identification in a T.I. parade earlier held nor by the dying declaration. It is of course true that the evidence  of P.W.50  corroborates the  evidence of P.W.3 regarding their  identification but we feel that we will not be justified  in raising  a conclusive  inference,   relying thereupon  that  they  were  also  amongst  the  miscreants. Besides, the prosecution has not ascribed any motive to them for committing the murder. 39.  On the  conclusions as  above we uphold the convictions and sentences  of A1 (George @ Vakkachan) as recorded by the High Court,  but set  aside the  convictions of  A2 and  A3. Resultantly, we  direct that A2 (Rajeev) and A3 (Joshy), who are  in   jail,  be  released  forthwith  unless  wanted  in connection  with  any  other  case.  The  appeals  are  thus disposed of.