10 September 1975
Supreme Court
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PARTAP Vs THE STATE OF U.P.

Bench: SARKARIA,RANJIT SINGH
Case number: Appeal Criminal 120 of 1971


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PETITIONER: PARTAP

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: THE STATE OF U.P.

DATE OF JUDGMENT10/09/1975

BENCH: SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH BENCH: SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH BHAGWATI, P.N.

CITATION:  1976 AIR  966            1976 SCR  (1) 757  1976 SCC  (2) 798  CITATOR INFO :  R          1979 SC 391  (9)  F          1980 SC 660  (16)  R          1990 SC1459  (21)

ACT:      Indian Evidence  Act (1  of 1872) -Sec. 105 Prosecution for murder- Plea of self-defence-Scope of proof.

HEADNOTE:      The appellant, his father and another were charged with murder  and   convicted  by   the  trial  court.  The  first information  referred   to  eye   witnesses,  of   whom  the prosecution  examined   only  two.  These  two  were  chance witnesses of another village, but the others who belonged to the village  where  the  occurrence  took  place,  were  not examined. The  third accused was acquitted on appeal. by the High Court  and the father died after his conviction was con firmed by  the High  Court. The  appellants plea  of private defence was  rejected both  by the  trial court and the High Court.      Allowing the appeal to this Court, ^      HELD (Per  M. H.  Beg J.):  Section 105 of the Evidence Act contains  two kinds of burden on the accused who sets up an exception  (i) the  onus  of  proving  the  existence  of circumstances bringing the case within any of the general or special exceptions  in the  I.P.C. Or  in any other law; and (ii)  the   burden  of   introducing  or  showing  evidence, resulting from  the last  part of  the provision  which says that  the   court  shall   presume  the   absence  of   such circumstances. The  effect of  the obligatory presumption at the end  of Section  105 is  that the  court must  start  by assuming that  no facts  exist which  could  be  taken  into consideration for considering the plea of self-defence as an exception to the criminal liability which would otherwise be there. But  when both  sides  have  led  evidence  of  their respective versions the accused’ can show, from the evidence on record,  whether  tendered  by  the  prosecution  or  the defence that  the mandatory presumption is removed. The last mentioned burden  is not really a burden of establishing the plea  fully   but  of  either  introducing  or  showing  the

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existence of  some evidence  to justify the taking up of the plea. The  burden resulting  from the obligatory presumption is not  difficult to  discharge and  its removal  may not be enough for acquittal. But the right of the accused to obtain the benefit of reasonable doubt is the necessary outcome and counter  part   of  the  prosecution’s  undeniable  duty  to establish its case beyond reasonable doubt and that right is available to  the accused  even if he fails to discharge his own duty  to prove  fully the  exception  pleaded.  [762A-D; 763E]      In the  present case,  even if  the appellant  did  not fully establish his plea. yet, there is sufficient evidence, both direct  and circumstantial, to justify the finding that the  prosecution   has  not   established  its  case  beyond reasonable doubt  against  the  appellant  on  an  essential ingredient of the offense of murder namely the required mens rea. An  examination of  all  the  facts  and  circumstances revealed by  the entire  evidence, including  the effect  of non-production of  the better  evidence available which. for some unexplained  reason was  not produced,  shows that  the plea of private defence cannot be reasonably ruled out. Even if the  deceased was  not positively  proved to be advancing threateningly with  a spear  poised for  attack, towards the appellant or  his father,  yet, a consideration of the whole evidence leads  to the  inference that  this was  reasonably likely to be true. [763C-764A-E]      (1) The  trial court  was inclined  to believe that the defence version was true to the extent that the deceased had rushed to  the scene  with a  spear. It  overlooked that the deceased while  going to help P.W. 1, had actually expressed his intention  to break  the heads  of the  members  of  the accused party  and that  he was  acting in  such a was as to appear to be bent on physically aggressive interference in a quarrel between  the two  sides. If  that was the conduct of the deceased,  it is  reasonable to  infer that he must have done some- 758 thing which  gave rise  to the  right of  private defence in favour of  the appeallant  Otherwise,  the  conduct  of  the appellant,  in  sparing,  P  W.  1,  who  according  to  the prosecution had  given offence to his father in the past and on the  day of  the incident.  and was advancing towards the father threatening  to strike him with a spade, but shooting the deceased who appeared on the scene subsequently and was, according  to   the  prosecution   version  unarmed  becomes inexplicable If  the right  of self-defence  had arisen  the shooting could not be murder, even if the right was exceeded the offence  could not  he culpable  homicide  amounting  to murder.[760B-F]      (2) Further,  the prosecution version is supported only by two  chance witnesses,  hut the  other persons,  who  had according  to   the  prosecution   version   witnessed   the occurrence and  whose names  were mentioned in the FIR. were neither produced  by the  prosecution nor were they examined as court witnesses [760G-761B]      (3) Moreover  the High Court itself did not rely on the statements of  the alleged  eye witnesses  when it acquitted the third accused who was also alleged to have shot with his pistol [764H]      Parbhoo v. Emperor, AIR 1941 All 402(FB) and Rishi Kesh Singh ors. v. The State AIR 1970 All] 51 (FB), referred to      (Per P. N. Bhagwati and R.S. Sarkaria, JJ)      The appellant  had established  by a  preponderance  of probability,  that   the  deceased  was  within  a  striking distance poised  for imminent attack on the appellant with a

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spear, when  the appellant  fired the fatal shot, and hence. the death was caused by the appellant in the exercise of the right of private defence.[769F-G]      (1) Nothing  turns on the evidence or the two witnesses who were  examined but  the approach  of the trial court and the High  Court to  the plea  of self-defense  raised by the appellant was  wrong necessitating a  review of the evidence by this Court [767D,G]      (2) The burden on the accused under s.105, Evidence Act is not  as onerous  as that  which lies  on the  prosecution under s  101, Evidence  Act, to  prove its  case. While  the prosecution is  required to prove its case beyond reasonable doubt, the  accused can discharge his onus by establishing a mere preponderance of probability [767-T]      (3) The  plea of private defence was specifically taken by the appellant at the trial in his examination under s 342 Cr.P.C., and  was put  to P.W.  1. the chief eye-witness for the prosecution.  The High  Court was wrong in branching the plea as  an after-though on the ground that he did not raise it  in   the  committal  court,  especially  when  there  is foundation for  it in  the prosecution  evidence itself. The record also  shows that only a composite question was put to the appellant  and that  he was not properly examined in the committal court. [767;768E-G]      (4) The  appellant plea  that the deceased was about to strike with  his spear  when the  gun was  fired was  highly probable. The  prosecution  case  was  that,  following  the threatening gesture  made by  P.W. 1.  to break the father’s head with  a spade  and the call given by him, the appellant came to the scene of occurrence with a gun; that immediately thereafter the  deceased came  proclaiming  that,  he  would break the  heads of, and settle scores with everyone of, the accused party,  and that the deceased had reached a distance of 3  or 4  paces from the appellant and was charging at him with the  appellant fired.  The prosecution  story that  the deceased was  unarmed  is  improbable.  He  would  not  have behaved in  that bold  and truculent  manner unless  he  was armed with a formidable weapon. [767H-767D]      (5) The  defence witness  also testified  that  he  was attracted from  his house  to the scene of occurrence by the outcry of the father, that he saw the deceased 759 armed with  a spear  running towards the scene of occurrence and that  he saw the deceased Lying dead with a spear beside him. He  was an  independent witness and nothing was brought out in  the cross-examination  to show  that he  was  either hostile towards  the complainant’s  party or had any special interest in  the accused.  His version  was probable and the High Court Was wrong in rejecting his evidence. [769D-F]

JUDGMENT:      CRIMINAL APPELLATE  JURISDICTION: Criminal  Appeal  No. 120 of 1971.      Appeal by  Special Leave  from the  Judgment and  order dated the  24th July,  1970 of  the Allahabad  High Court at Allahabad in Criminal Appeal No. 581 of 1968.      A. N. Mulla and O. N. Mohindroo for the Appellant.      D. P. Uniyal and O. P. Rana for the Respondent.      The Judgment  of P.  N. Bhagwati and R. S. Sarkaria was delivered by  R. S.  Sarkaria, J.  Beg, J.  gave a  separate opinion.      BEG, J.  I have  had the advantage of going through the judgement of  my learned  brother Sarkaria. I confess that I

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do not  feel confident  enough about  the  veracity  of  the defence case  and the  evidence found in support of it to be able  to   hold  that   it  is   proved  on   a  balance  of probabilities. But,  I think  that what  transpires  from  a consideration of the whole evidence is enough to entitle the accused to a benefit of doubt for the reasons given below.      The findings  of the Trial Court on the defence version indicate that  a question  of law  arise here which seems to have troubled  several High Courts. It gave rise to two Full Bench decisions  of the  Allahahad High  Court, the first in Parbhoo v.  Emperor,(l) and the second in Rishi Kesh Singh & ors. v.  the  State(’).  It  does  not  seem  to  have  been considered in the same form by this Court. r I think this is an appropriate  case in  which this Court could consider and decide it,  and, it  is because  this aspect of the case was ignored by  the Trial Court as well as the High Court that I consider this  to be  a fit  case for  a reconsideration  of evidence and interference by this Court under Article 136 or the Constitution.      The Trial  Court, after assuming that there may be some truth in  the defence  version that Ram Nath had gone to the scene of occurrence with a bhala, said:           "Even if  Ram Nath  had arrived  there armed  with      bhala, there  could be  no  apprehension  of  death  or      grievous hurt  to any one of the accused persons as the      accused persons  were armed  with gun  and  pistol  and      could defend  themselves if  Ram Nath  tried t(3 strike      them with ’bhala’.           Pratap and  Suresh’accused could  not be justified      in firing gun-shots and pistol-shots at Ram Nath in the      expectation that  Ram Nath  may reach  the place  where      Puttu Lal  accused was standing and may strike him with      ’bhala’.      (1) A.l.R. 1941 All. 402 (FB).      (2) AIR 1970 All. Sl (FB). 760           Pratap and  Suresh accused  had started from their      house A with gun and pistol before they had known about      the reaching  of Ram Nath at that place with a ’bhala’.      It can  reasonably be inferred from the own case of the      defence that  Pratap and  Suresh accused,  or at  least      Pratap accused, had arrived there with the intention of      committing the  murder of  Raj Kumar or of any body who      may interfere  in the wordy duel between Raj Kumar P.W.      and Puttu Lal accused".      This shows that the Trial Court was inclined to believe that the  defence version  was true  to the  extent that Ram Nath had  rushed to  the scene  of occurrence  with a bhala, when a  quarrel between the two sides was taking place. But, it overlooked here that Ram Nath, while going to the help of Raj Kumar, had actually expressed his intention to break the heads  of  members  of  Puttu  Lal’s  party.  At  any  rate, according to  the prosecution evidence., Ram Nath was acting in  such   a  way  as  to  appear  like  a  "lion"  bent  on interference to  protect Raj  Kumar in a quarrel between the two sides. If this was Ram Nath’s conduct, could he not have done something  which gave  rise to  the  right  of  private defence of  person ?  If that  right had  arisen  how  could shooting him be murder ? Even if it was exceeded the offence could not be culpable homicide amounting to murder.      Why should Pratap, the appellant, have spared Raj Kumar who, according to the prosecution evidence itself, had given offence to  Puttu Lal  in the  past and  then on the date of incident by  actually demolishing  a nali and then advancing towards him  with his  phawra, threatening  to strike  Puttu

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Lal, but  shoot at  Ram Nath  who appeared  subsequently and was, according  to the  prosecution version, quite unarmed ? The prosecution  evidence is  that Puttu  Lal had called his son Pratap  and asked  him to  bring his  gun only  when Raj Kumar had  threatened to  attack him with his phawra and had advanced towards  Puttu Lal. Nevertheless, Pratap and Suresh are alleged to have shot down Ram Nath, even though Ram Nath was empty  handed, but  did nothing  to Raj  Kumar who  was, according to  the prosecution  version, more  offensive  and threatening with  a phawrah  and was  the cause of the whole trouble   Such conduct,  attributed to Pratap and Suresh, in the setting alleged, seems quite unnatural and eccentric.      Raj Kumar, P.W. 1, also stated that Atma Ram, Achhe Ram and Sia  Ram, Pradhan,  took their  stand in  parti land  at about the same time as Ram Nath had arrived on the scene and had asked  Ram Nath  not to loose heart or to be discouraged as he  was coming  to deal  with each  one  of  Raj  Kumar’s adversaries. Then,  at Puttu  Lal’s instigation,  Pratap and Suresh are  alleged to have shot at Ram Nath. Why is it that this version  of the  obviously interested  Raj Kumar, PW 1, is, only  supported  by  two  chance  witnesses  of  another village, but  neither Atma  Ram nor  Achhe Ram, nor Sia Ram, Pradhan of  village Sant  Kuiyan, who  had, according to the prosecution version,  witnessed the  occurrence not produced by the prosecution at all ? The prosecution could select its witnesses. But, why was such an objectionable selection made ? Was it not a case in which the Court should have exercised its power  under Section  540  Criminal  Procedure  Code  to summon at least Sia Ram 761      Pradhan, in  whose grove  Ram Nath  was shot,  so as to ascertain the  whole truth more satisfactorily ? Had not the Trial Court  and the  High Court  too readily  assumed  that absolute truth  fell from  the lips of prosecution witnesses as regards  the commencement  of aggression  even when their own statements  contained  admissions  indicating  that  the whole or  the real  truth had  not been  revealed by  them ? These are  some of  the doubts  which the  rather mechanical examination of  evidence by  the Trial  Court and  the  High Court do not dispel.      The question  which arises in this case is: Even if the defence version  is not  held to  be fully established, by a balance of probabilities, were there not sufficient pointers in evidence  of what was probably the truth which leaked out from some statements of the prosecution witnesses themselves ? They  had indicated the bellicose and threatening attitude of Ramnath  while he  was advancing.  Did this  not tend  to corroborate  the   defence  version  that  he  was  actually advancing menacingly armed with a bhala piosed for an attack with it when he was shot at ?      It was  held in the case of Rishi Kesh Singh (supra) by a majority  of a  Full Bench of nine Judges of the Allahabad High Court explaining and relying upon the decisions of this Court discussed there (at p. 51):           "The accused  person who  pleads an  exception  is      entitled to be acquitted if upon a consideration of the      evidence as  a whole  (including the  evidence given in      support  of  the  plea  of  the  general  exception)  a      reasonable doubt  is created  in the  mind of the Court      about the built of the accused". In that case, the result of a consideration of the decisions of this  Court in  relation to the provisions of Section 105 of the  Evidence Act was summed up by me as follows (at page 97-98):           ". . . an accused’s plea of an exception may reach

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    one  of   three  not  sharply  demarcated  stages,  one      succeeding the  other, depending upon the effect of the      whole evidence  in the case judged by the standard of a      prudent  man   weighing  or   balancing   probabilities      carefully. These  stages are: firstly, a lifting of the      initial obligatory  presumption given  at  the  end  of      section 105  of the  Act; secondly,  the creation  of a      reasonable doubt  about the  existence of an ingredient      of the  offence; and,  thirdly, a complete proof of the      exception by  ’a preponderance  of probability’,  which      covers even a slight tilt of the balance of probability      in favour  of the  accused’s plea.  The accused  is not      entitled to  an acquittal  if his  plea  does  not  get      beyond the first stage. At the second stage, he becomes      entitled to  acquittal by  obtaining a  bare benefit of      doubt. At  the third  stage, he is undoubtedly entitled      to an  acquittal. This, in my opinion, is the effect of      the majority  view in  Parbhoo’.  case  which  directly      relates to  first two  stages only.  The Supreme  Court      decisions have  considered the  last two stages so far,      but the  first  stage  has  not  yet  been  dealt  with      directly or separately there in any case brought to our      notice." 18-L925SupCl/75 762      Provisions of  Section 105  of the  Evidence Act, which are applicable   in  such cases, contain what are really two kinds of  burden of  the accused  who sets  up an exception; firstly,  there  is  the  onus  laid  down  of  proving  the existence of  circumstances bringing  the case within any of the General  exceptions in the Indian Penal Code, or, within any special exception or proviso contained in any other part of the  same Code,  or in any law defining the offence, and, secondly, there  is the  burden of  introducing  or  showing evidence which  results from  the last part of the provision which says that "the Court shall presume the absence of such circumstances". The effect of this obligatory presumption at the end of Section 105 of the Evidence Act is that the Court must start  by assuming  that no  facts exist which could be taken into  consideration for  considering the  plea of self defence as  an exception  to the  criminal  liability  which would otherwise  be there.  But, when  both sides  have  led evidence of their respective versions, the accused can show, from any  evidence on  the record,  whether tendered  by the prosecution or  the defence,  that the mandatory presumption is removed. the last mentioned burden is not really a burden of establishing  the plea fully but of either introducing or of showing  the existence  of some  evidence to  justify the taking up  of  the  plea.  The  burden  resulting  from  the obligatory presumption is not difficult to discharge and its removal may not be enough nor an acquittal. D      Section 105  of the  Evidence Act was thus explained in Rishi Kesh Singh’s case (supra) (at P. 95):           "Even a  literal interpretation  of the first part      of Section  105 could  indicate  that  ’the  burden  of      proving the  existence of  circumstances  bringing  the      case’ within  an exception  is meant  to cover complete      proof of  the exception  pleaded, by a preponderance of      probability, as  well as proof of circumstances showing      that the  exception may  exist which  will entitle, the      accused to  the benefit  of doubt on the ingredients of      an offence. If the intention was to confine the benefit      of bringing  a case  within an exception to cases where      the exception  was established  by a  pre-ponderance of      probability, more  direct and  definite language  would

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    have been  employed by  providing that the accused must      ’prove the  existence’ of  the exception  pleaded. But,      the language  used in  the first  part of  Section  105      seems to  be deliberately  less  precise  so  that  the      accused, even  if he fails to discharge his duty fully,      by establishing  the existence of an exception, may get      the benefit  of the  exception  in  directly  when  the      prosecution fails  in its  duty  to  eliminate  genuine      doubt about his guilt introduced by the accused. Again,      the last  part of  Section 105,  even if  strictly  and      literally interpreted, does not justify reading into it      the meaning  that the  obligatory presumption must last      until the  accused’s plea  is fully established and not      just till  circumstances (i.e.  not necessarily all) to      support the  plea are  proved. Moreover,  a restrictive      interpretation of  Section 105, excluding an accused 11      from  the  benefit  of  bringing  his  case  within  an      exception until he fully proves it, is ruled out by the      declaration of  law by  the Supreme Court that there is      no conflict between Section 763      105 and the prosecution’s duty to prove its case beyond      reasonable doubt. Hence, the obligatory presumption, at      the end  of Section  105, cannot  be held to last until      the  accused   proves  his   exception   fully   by   a      preponderance of probability. It is necessarily removed      earlier or  operates only  initially as held clearly by      judges taking the majority view in Parbhoo’s case, 1941      All LJ 619-AIR 1941 All 402 (FB)".      It was also said there (at p. 89):           "The legal position of a state of reasonable doubt      may Be  viewed and stated from two opposite angles. One      may recognise,  in a  realistic fashion, that, although      the law  prescribes  only  the  higher  burden  of  the      prosecution to  prove its  case beyond reasonable doubt      and the accused’s lower burden of proving his plea by a      preponderance of  probability only,  yet, there  is, in      practice, a  still lower burden of creating reason able      doubt about  the accused’s guilt, and that an accused’s      can obtain an acquittal by satisfying this lower burden      too in  practice. The  objection to  stating the law in      this fashion  is that  it looks  like introducing a new      type of  burden of  proof, although, it may be said, in      defence of  such a  statement of  the law, that it only      recognises what  is true.  Alternatively, one  may  say      that the  right of the accused to obtain the benefit of      a  reasonable   doubt  is  the  necessary  outcome  and      counterpart of  the prosecution’s  undeniable  duty  to      establish its  case beyond  reasonable doubt  and  that      this right is available to the accused even if he fails      to discharge  his own duty to prove fully the exception      pleaded. This  technically more  correct way of stating      the law was indicated by Woolmington’s case and adopted      by the  majority in Parbhoo’s case, and, after that, by      the Supreme  Court. It  seems to me that so long as the      accused’s legal duty to prove his plea fully as well as      his equally  clear legal right to obtain the benefit of      reasonable doubt,  upon a  consideration of  the  whole      evidence,  on   an  ingredient   of  an   offence,  are      recognised, a mere difference of mode in describing the      position, from  two different  angles, is an immaterial      matter of  form only.  Even if  the latter form appears      somewhat artificial,  it must  be preferred  after  its      adoption by the Supreme Court". (See: K. M. Nanavati v.      State of Maharashtra-AIR 1962 SC 605).

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         Applying the  principle of  benefit of doubt, as I      had’ explained above, to the plea of private defence of      person in  the instant  case, I think that, even if the      appellant did  not fully establish his plea, yet, there      is sufficient evidence, both direct and circumstantial,      to justify  the finding  that the  prosecution has  not      established its  case beyond  reasonable doubt  against      Pratap on  an essential  ingredient of  the offence  of      murder: the  required mens rea. After examining all the      facts and  circumstances revealed  by  the  prosecution      evidence  itself   and   the   defence   evidence   and      considering the  effect of non-production of the better      evidence available  which for  some unexplained reason,      was not produced, I am not satis- 764 fied that  the plea  of private  defence of  person  can  be reasonably ruled  A out here. This is enough, in my opinion, to entitle the appellant to get the benefit of doubt.      I may  observe here  that the  High Court  had not only failed to  grapple with  this difficulty  arising  from  the evidence in  the case  and some of the findings of the Trial Court, which seemed to think that the intention to murder or the required  mens rea  for murder must be presumed from the mere fact of homicide (a wholly incorrect approach in a case where a  plea of  private defence had been raised and sought to be  established by  some evidence),  but, the  High Court itself started  from  a  totally  unsound  premise  when  it observed:           "It was Puttu Lal who was committing aggression by      insisting that  Raj Kumar should not dismantle the Nali      It is again admitted by Puttu Lal that he cried out for      help in  response to  which Pratap arrived armed with a      double barrel gun."      In other  words, the  High Court  assumed that  a  mere insistence by  Puttu Lal that Raj Kumar should not dismantle the  nali  amounted  to  an  "aggression"  begun.  The  word "aggression" is generally used for an actual invasion of the property of  another or an attack on the body of another. It is true  that it  is not  necessary that  an  actual  attack should commence before a right of private defence can arise. Nevertheless, a  reasonable apprehension of injury could not be said to arise by a mere prohibition to dig up a "nali" or drain. It  could arise  if a  man is  advancing aggressively towards others holding out threats to break their heads even if he  is armed  with a  lathi with which he could carry out such a  declared intention.  The extent  of the right or its justification is  another matter  depending again upon facts which  have  a  bearing  on  extent  of  the  right  or  its reasonable exercise. In the circumstances of the case before us, I  think, we  can hold,  that, even  if Ram Nath was not positively proved to be threateningly advancing with a bhala poised for  attack towards  Pratap, appellant, or Puttu Lal, yet, a  consideration of  all the probabilities and evidence on record  leads us to infer that this was reasonably likely to be  true. If  this was so, it is clear that the appellant must have  discharged his gun when Ram Nath had advanced and come near  enough in  a  manner  which  must  have  been  so menacing as  to raise  an apprehension of an attack with the bhala. Such  an assumption fits in with medical evidence too showing that  the shots were fired from a close enough range to cause charring.      Another feature  of the  case is  that the  High  Court itself did  not rely  on the  statements of  the alleged eye witnesses when  it acquitted Suresh, who was also alleged to have shot  with his  pistol" giving him the benefit of doubt

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because, unlike  Puttu Lal  and Pratap,  he had  denied  his presence or  participation in the occurrence and was said to be only distantly related to Puttu Lal. 765      I think, on an analysis of the whole evidence, that the appellant Pratap was also entitled to the benefit of a doubt which could be said to be reasonable.      I, therefore,  concur  in  the  order  proposed  by  my learned Brother.      SARKARIA, J.  This appeal  by special leave is directed against a judgment of the High Court of Allahabad dismissing the  appeal   of  Partap   appellant  and   maintaining  his conviction under  s. 302,  Penal  Code.  The  facts  of  the prosecution case  as narrated at the trial by Raj Kumar, the star witness of the prosecution, were as follows:      Raj Kumar  had installed  a Tubewell in his field known as ’Chharelawala.field’  in the  revenue estate  of  village Sant Kuiyan,  in the  year 1962.  The water  pumped out from this tubewell  was utilised  by him  not only for irrigating his own  fields but  also those  of the  neighbours  against charges. Subsequently,  Puttu Lal  accused  also  set  up  a tubewell in his land situate in the vicinity of Chharelawala field. Puttu  Lal, too,  started letting  out the use of his tubewell on  hire. An  unhealthy competition  ensued between Raj Kumar  and Puttu  Lal in  this water business, and their relations became strained. There was a water channel running from north to south in Raj Kumar’s field through which Puttu Lal used  to  supply  water  to  others.  To  the  south  of Chharelawala field,  there is  grove belonging  to Sia  Ram, Pardhan of the village. The tubewell of Puttu Lal is located towards the  south  of  that  grove.  To  the  west  of  the Chharelawala field, is a plot belonging to Puttu Lal.      Two or  three days  before the  occurrence in question, there was  an exchange  of hot  words between  Raj Kumar and Puttu Lal  when the  latter insisted on taking water through the said channel. Raj Kumar firmly refused Puttu Lal the use of that channel.      on S-1-1967,  at about  7.45 a.m.,  Raj Kumar  and  his brothers Ramchander  and Bhagwan  Sahai, started demolishing their channel so that Puttu Lal should not be able to supply water through  it. About  fifteen minutes  thereafter, Puttu Lal and his son, Ram Parkash, appeared on the northern ridge of the grove of Siya Ram. Puttu Lal was carrying a lathi and Ram Parkash  a bhala.  Puttu Lal  asked Raj  Kumar  and  his companions not  to demolish  the channel.  Raj Kumar  rudely refused asserting  that the  channel belonged  to him and he had every  right to  erase it.  Raj Kumar  advanced  towards Puttu Lal  threatening to break his head with the spade, and thus settle the matter once for all. On being so threatened, Puttu Lal  shouted  to  his  son,  the  appellant,  to  come immediately with  his gun.  In response to Puttu Lal’s call, the appellant,  armed with the double-barrel licensed gun of Puttu Lal,  and Puttu  Lal’s other son, Suresh, armed with a pistol, came.  A couple  of minutes after the arrival of the appellant and  Suresh, the deceased Ram Nath who was the son of Raj  Kumar’s wife’s  brother, came  out running  from the grove. He shouted to 766 Raj Kumar  not to  be afraid  as he  would settle the matter with every-  A one  of the accused and break their heads. On seeing the  deceased, Puttu  Lal said: "He thinks himself to be  a   lion,  let  us  see  him  first  of  all".  On  this instigation, Partap  fired  his  gun  at  Ram  Nath  from  a distance of  four or  five paces. On receiving the gun-shot, Ram Nath  turned back when he was hit by a second shot fired

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by Suresh  from his  pistol. Ram  Nath,  dropped  dead.  The accused then  ran away  taking their  weapons with them. Raj Kumar PW  1 went  home, scribed  the report.  Exh. ka-3, and handed it  over in  the Kain  Ganj Police  Station, 8  miles away, at  9.30 a.m. After registering a case on the basis of this report, Sub-Inspector Kartar Singh reached the spot and started the  investigation. He  prepared the  inquest report and sent the body for post-mortem examination.      The autopsy  was conducted  by Dr. S. P. Chaturvedi, PW 3, on  6-1-1967, at 12.40 p.m. The Doctor found five gunshot wounds of entry and three of exit on the deadbody. There was blackening around all the wounds of entry. The death, in the opinion of  the Doctor,  was due to shock and haemorrhage on account of  the gunshot  wounds of  the head  and the  right lung. The accused surrendered in the court of the Additional District Magistrate, Farrukhabad on 7-1-1969, and thereafter their custody was taken over by the Police. After conducting the preliminary  enquiry the Magistrate committed Puttu Lal, Suresh and  Partap accused for trial to the court of Session on charges  under ss.  302/34, 109  Penal Code All the three accused were  convicted and  each of  them was  sentenced to imprisonment for life and a fine of Rs. 200/-.      The plea  of the  accused was  one  of  denial  of  the prosecution case.  Suresh pleaded  alibi and  alleged  false implication. Partap  pleaded that  the deceased was about to strike him  with a  bhalla and  consequently, he  fired  two shots, in  self-defence, from  his double-barrel  gun at the deceased.      The accused examined Chhote Khan, DW 1. in defence.      The  trial  judge  rejected  the  defence  version  and convicted and sentenced the accused as aforesaid.      In appeal,  the High Court acquitted Suresh accused but maintained the  conviction of  Puttu Lal  and Partap. Before the admission  of the  special leave  petition under Article 136 of  the Constitution by this Court, Puttu Lal died. Thus only the  appellant’s conviction  survives for consideration in this appeal.      The decision  of the  courts below  rests mainly on the testimony of  the three eye-witnesses, namely, Raj Kumar, PW 1, Atma Ram PW 2, and Achhey Ram, PW 4.      Mr. A.  N. Mulla, the learned Counsel for the appellant contends that  the evidence  of P.Ws. 2 and 4 was not worthy of credence;  that being  residents of  another village  and having failed  to give  a credible reason for their presence at the  scene of  occurrence, they  were chance witnesses of the worst type; that as admitted by their brother" Bisheshar Dayal, PW 15, they were not only related to the deceased but were 767 stock witnesses  of the Police. that since the witnesses did not frankly and fully admit their mutual blood relationship" they were of a type to whom truth, even in trifles, appeared to be  unpalatable;  that  the  prosecution  had  failed  to examine Siya  Ram and  Mahabir who  were also  named as eye- witnesses in  the F.I.R.  and the  courts below had erred in not drawing  an adverse inference against the prosecution on that score.      Although this  criticism levelled against P.Ws. 2 and 4 is not  totally devoid  of force,  we  do  not  think  it  a sufficient  ground  to  depart  from  the  settled  rule  of practice according  to which  this Court  does not,  in  the absence of  material irregularity,  illegality  or  manifest error, itself  reappraise the  evidence. In  spite of  these infirmities, the  courts below  have believed their presence at the  time and  place of  occurrence. The reasons given by

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the witnesses  for  their  presence  at  the  spot,  may  be vulnerable, even  wrong. True,  they are  residents  of  the neighbouring village,  1 1/2  or 2 miles away, and belong to the caste  of the  deceased.  PW  15  may  be  bearing  some relationship with  the deceased.  But the  fact remains that PWs 2  and 4  have been named as eye-witnesses in the F.I.R. which was  lodged in  the Police Station, 8 miles away, with utmost promptitude.      Be that  as it may, the fate of the case did not depend on the evidence of these two witnesses. Raj Kumar’s evidence corroborated by  the F.I.R.  and the  other evidence  on the record, was by itself, sufficient to hold that the appellant had fired a fatal shot at the deceased from close range with the double-barrel gun of his father. Thus, the only question that falls  to be  considered in  this appal is, whether Ram Nath was  shot dead  by the appellant in the exercise of his right of private defence ?      We have  carefully scrutinised  the  judgments  of  the courts below. In our opinion, their finding in regard to the plea of  self-defence is  clearly erroneous.  They appear to have overlooked  he distinction between the nature of burden that rests  on an  accused under  s. 105   Evidence  Act  to establish a  plea of  self-defence and  the one  cast on the prosecution by  Section 101  to prove  its case. It is well- settled that  the burden on the accused is not as onerous as that which lies on the prosecution. While the prosecution is required to  prove its  case beyond  a reasonable doubt, the accused can  discharge  his  onus  by  establishing  a  mere preponderance of probability.      Since the  approach of  the courts  below is  basically wrong, it  has become  necessary to  examine the material on record bearing  on the  plea of  self-defence. This plea was specifically taken  by the  appellant at  the trial  in  his examination under  s. 342,  Cr. P.C. It was put to Raj Kumar PW 1,  the  chief  witness  of  the  prosecution,  in  cross examination. Raj Kumar replied: "It is wrong to suggest that Ram Nath  would have murdered Partap if Partap had not fired at him.  Ram Nath had nothing in his hand." The courts below have accepted without demur the ipse dixit of Raj Kumar that the deceased  was unarmed.  We find it impossible to swallow this so  improbable a  version the  credibility of which was extremely underminded by the telling 768 circumstances  appearing   in  the    prosecution  evidence, itself. It  was the  admitted case  of the  prosecution that following the threatening gesture made by Raj Kumar to break Puttu Lal’s head with the spade, and the call given by Puttu Lal,  the   appellant  came  there  armed  with  a  gun  and immediately   thereafter,   the   deceased   came   running, proclaiming that  he would break the heads of and settle the scores with  everyone of  the accused  party. It  is further admitted that the deceased had reached at a distance of 3 or 4 paces  from the  appellant  when  the  latter  fired.  The blackening found  around the wounds of entry on the deadbody by the medical witness, confirm that the deceased was within six feet  of the  assailant when he received those injuries. Again, it is the case of the prosecution that at the time of the first  gun-fire the  deceased was  facing the appellant. The medical  evidence also  confirms  it,  inasmuch  as  two entrance wounds  (1 and 5) were located on the front side of the  deceased.   From  this   circumstance  it   is  clearly discernible that the deceased was charging at the gunman and had reached  within a  striking distance when his charge was foiled by  the gun-fire. It is difficult to believe that the deceased would have behaved in the bold and truculent manner

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he did,  if he  were not  armed with a formidable weapon. It was put to Raj Kumar by the defence that if the deceased was empty handed-as  was alleged  by  the  witness  how  did  he proclaim to  break the heads of the accused. The witness had no  satisfactory   answer  to  it.  Conscious  that  he  was suppressing the  fact in  question, all that he could say in befuddled embarrassment,  was: ’‘I  do not  know  with  what weapon he was going to break the heads."      The appellant’s  plea that  the deceased  was going  to strike him with a Bhalla, when the gun was fired, was highly probable.      one of  the reasons  given by the learned Judges of the High Court  for ignoring  this plea  was that it was belated and had  not  been  set  up  by  the  appellant  during  his examination in  the Committal  Court. A glance at the record of that  examination would  show that  he was  not  properly examined in  that court.  Only  a  composite  question  with regard to all the circumstances of the prosecution case, was put to  him in  the Committal  Court, which  he denied.  The omission of  the appellant  to set  up the  plea of  private defence in  the Committal Court, therefore, was no ground to brand it  as an  after-thought, particularly  when there was foundation for it in the prosecution evidence, itself.      The  circumstances   appearing   in   the   prosecution evidence, and  the statement of the appellant recorded under Sec 342, Cr. P.C. did not exhaust the material in support of the plea  of self-defence. There was the direct testimony of Chhote Khan,  DW 1, who testified that he was attracted from his house  to the  spot by  the outcry  of Puttu Lal accused which was  to the  effect, that he was being killed. Witness saw Ram  Nath deceased,  armed with a spear, running towards the move  of Siya  Ram. Thereafter,  he heard two reports of gun-fire. On  reaching the  grove, the  witness saw Ram Nath lying dead  with a  spear by  his side. Partap appellant and Puttu Lal were also seen running away from the scene. Partap was carrying  a gun.  Witness did  not see  Suresh  and  Ram Parkash there. Excepting the precise words of 769 Puttu Lal’s  call and  the fact  of the deceased being armed with a  spear, Chhote  Khan’s evidence in so far as it goes, fits in with the prosecution story.      The High  Court has  rejected hi, evidence without much discussion  for  two  reasons;  firstly,  that  he  was  not speaking the  truth inasmuch as he stated that Puttu Lal was raising an  outcry that he  was being killed, because it was no-body’s case  that any  body  assaulted  or  attempted  to assault Puttu  Lal. Secondly, the witness did not appear and make any statement before the investigating officer. Neither of these  was a  good ground  to reject his testimony but of hand. Chhote  Khan was  a resident  of the same village. The place of  occurrence is  not situated  at a far off distance from the  village, Indeed,  it was the prosecution case that the appellant  and deceased  came to  the spot after hearing the shouts  of Puttu Lal and Raj Kumar. Chhote Khan’s coming to the spot from the village on hearing the same shouts, was therefore, equally  probable. In  any case, his reaching the scene on hearing the reports of gun-fire and seeing Ram Nath lying dead with a spear, was a highly probable fact.      Nor could  his version  that Puttu  Lal was  raising an outcry that  he   was being killed, be rejected outright. It was admitted  by Raj Kumar in cross-examination, that he and his companions  had advanced  2 paces  towards  the  accused Puttu Lal  and others, threatening to break their heads with the Phawra  (spade and  that the  witness was  then carrying (rather brandishing)  the spade. It is further admitted that

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it was  after this  threat that Puttu Lal gave a call to the appellant to  come armed with the gun. In the face of such a threat, it  was not  improbable for Puttu Lal to cry out for help saying that he was being killed.      Chhote Khan  was an  independent witness.  Nothing  was brought out in cross-examination to show that he was hostile towards- the  complainant party  or had any special interest in the defence.      In the light of the above discussion, the conclusion is inescapable that the appellant had succeeded in establishing by a  preponderance of  probability, that  the deceased  was within a  striking distance,   poised for imminent attack on the appellant  with a spear, when the latter fired the fatal gunshot. In  such a  situation, the appellant had reasonable and immediate  apprehension that  he would  suffer death  or grieous hurt  if he  did not  fire at the deceased. Thus the death was,  in all   probability, caused by the appellant in the exercise of his right of private defence.      For the  foregoing reasons  we allow  the  appeal,  set aside the conviction of the appellant and acquit him. V.P.S                                       Appeal allowed . 770