22 October 1997
Supreme Court
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RAJU @ RAJENDRARAJYA A ALIAS RAJU Vs STATE OF MAHARASHTRA


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PETITIONER: RAJU @ RAJENDRARAJYA A ALIAS RAJU

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: STATE OF MAHARASHTRA

DATE OF JUDGMENT:       22/10/1997

BENCH: M. K. MUKHERJEE, K. T. THOMAS

ACT:

HEADNOTE:

JUDGMENT:                             WITH               CRIMINAL APPEAL NO. 695 OF 1997                       J U D G M E N T MUKHERJEE, J.      These two appeals, filed under Section 2 of the Supreme Court (Enlargement  of Criminal Appellate Jurisdiction) Act, 1970, are  directed against  the judgment  and  order  dated August 16,  1991 of the Bombay High Court in Criminal Appeal No. 294  of 1996 whereby it set aside the acquittal of Rajya @ Raju  (hereinafter  referred  to  as  ’A-1’)  and  Raju  @ Rajendra (hereinafter  referred to  as ’A-2’)  of the charge under Section  302/34 I.P.C. recorded in their favour by the sessions Judge.  Wardha and  convicted  and  sentenced  them thereunder.      Briefly stated the prosecution case is as under: (a)  On March  14, 1995  at or about 6 P.M. A-1 and A-2 went to the  house of  Ramkrishna (the  deceased), who  lived  in their neighbourhood,  and took  him to  the house  of Ganesh (P.W.3) where  all of them consumed liquor.  Thereafter they proceeded towards  Ramnagar along  the  Rashtrabhasha  Road. When they reached the Ganesh temple situated on that road A- 1 and  A-2 started  beating Ramkrishna:  the former  with  a hockey stick  and the  latter with  a stone,  when, owing to such beating  he fell down they took him behind the house of one Timande  in a  rickshaw and  dumped him  there.   In the meantime two  boys had  gone to  the house of Ramkrishna and told his  father Yadaorao  (P.W.1) about the incident. P.W.1 immediately rushed  to the spot and found his son lying in a rickshaw, but its puller was not there.  While he was making arrangement to  remove his  son to the hospital a police van arrived there.   In  that van  he took his son, first to the police station  and from  there  to  the  General  Hospital, Wardha.   After admitting  him there  P.W.1 came back to the police station  and lodged  a report  about the  incident at 8.30 P.M.  On that  information a  case was registered under Section 307/34 I.P.C. and investigation taken up. (b)  In that  night at or about 11 P.M. Ramkrishna succumbed to his  injuries.   After inquest his dead body was sent for post-mortem examination.   Dr. Moon (P.W.7) held the autopsy and found  twelve injuries on his person including fractures

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of his left arm and left side of the mandible. (c)  On the  following morning  (15.3.1985) Inspector  Patil (P.W.6) went  to the  scene of  offence and  seized a hockey stick, a stone and some earth under a panchnama. (d)  On March 15, 1985 both the appellants were arrested and their  wearing  apparels  which  were  blood  stained,  were seized.   Those clothes  along with the articles seized from the scene  of  offence  and  the  wearing  apparels  of  the deceased were  sent for chemical examination.  After receipt of  the   report  of  such  examination  and  completion  of investigation  police  submitted  charge-sheet  against  the appellants. 3.   The appellants pleaded not guilty to the charges framed against them  and  contended  that  they  had  been  falsely implicated. 4.   To sustain  the charge  levelled against the appellants the prosecution  relied upon  the ocular  evidence  of  Raju (P.W.4) and  Gulab (P.W.12),  and its  corroboration by  the medical evidence  and the recoveries of blood stained hockey stick and  stone from  the scene  of offence  and  of  blood stained clothes  from the  persons of  the appellants at the time of their arrest.  Besides, the prosecution led evidence through P.W.1 to prove that sometime before the incident the appellants came  to his house and took the deceased out with them 5.   On  consideration   of  the  evidence  adduced  by  the prosecution (no  witness was  examined by  the defence)  the trial court  held that  P.W.4 and P.W.12 could not be relied upon: firstly,  because  they  were  chance  witnesses  and, secondly, because  they did  not disclose  the fact of their having seen  the incident to anybody till they were examined by the  Investigating Officer  in the  afternoon of  May 15, 1985.   It further observed that in view of the admission of P.W.12 that  the two  appellants were  not known to him from before it was the incumbent duty of the Investigating Agency to have  a test  identification parade  held and  in absence thereof their  identification by  him (P.W.12) for the first time in  Court was of no moment.  As, according to the trial court,  the   other  circumstances   alleged   against   the appellants, by  themselves, did not unerringly point towards the guilt  of the  appellants, it  gave them  the benefit of reasonable doubt.   In reversing the order of acquittal, the High Court  observed that in absence of any material brought on  record  that  the  two  eye  witnesses  were  inimically disposed towards the appellants or that they were interested in the  cause of the prosecution, the trial court was not at all justified  in discarding  their evidence, more, so, when on being  interrogated by  the Investigating  Officer on the following day  they narrated  the incident.   The High Court found  their   evidence  not   only  trustworthy  but  fully corroborated   by    the   medical    evidence   and   other circumstantial evidence. 6.   This being  a statutory appeal we have gone through the entire evidence  on record  and the judgments of the learned Courts below.  Having done so we are constrained to say that the disinclination of the trial court to accept the evidence of the  two eye  witnesses and,  for that matter, the entire prosecution  case  was  not  proper.    Raju  Balwe  (P.W.4) testified that on the day in question he went to the shop of Gulab Ahuja  (P.W.12) on  Station Road at or about 6 P.M. as he wanted to buy some earthen pots.  Accompanied by him they proceeded on  a scooter  along Rashtrabhasha  Road to got to Hind Nagar for the purpose.  On the way they saw a number of people present  near the  Ganesh temple.  They alighted from the scooter  and found A-2 beating Ramakrishna with a hockey

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stick; and  after he  fell down  A-1 picking  up a big stone from a nearby heap and dropping it on the leg of the victim. When Ramkrishna  raised cries  they brought  a rickshaw  and after putting  him in  it dragged  the  rickshaw  upto  some distance  towards  the  Railway  Station.    The  other  eye witness,  namely   P.W.12,  fully   corroborated  the  above testimony of P.W.4. Both these witnesses were cross examined a length  but nothing could be elicited in cross examination to discredit their claim that they had seen the assault.  As earlier noticed  one of  the principal  reasons that weighed with  the   trial  Court  for  disbelieving  the  above  two witnesses was  their conduct  in not disclosing the incident to anyone  till they  were  examined  by  the  Investigating Officer on  the following  day.    In  repelling  the  above criticism the High Court observed:      "All  that   they  had   seen   was      Ramkrishna  being   beaten  in  the      market  place  and  beaten  in  the      market place and being removed in a      rickshaw  by   the  Station   Road.      There was  no reason  for  them  to      apprehend that Ramkrishna must have      been killed  by the  accused Nos. 1      and 2.  In fact, Ramkrishna died at      about 10 P.M., after he was removed      to the  hospital.   The  apathy  of      even the  law-abiding  citizens  in      reporting the  outrages,  to  which      they   were   witnesses,   is   too      notorious to  merit a  mention, and      merely because  these witnesses had      not  reported  the  matter  to  the      police, it  would not  follow  that      they were not telling the truth."      In absence of anything elicited in cross examination to indicate that  these two  witnesses were  interested in  the prosecution of  the appellants we are in full agreement with the above  quoted observations of the High Court.  The other criticism levelled  by the trial Court that they were chance witnesses is  also wholly  unmerited for  in respect  of  an incident that  takes place  on a public road, the passers-by would be  the  best  witnesses.    We  have,  therefore,  no hesitation in  concluding that  the claim  of the  above two witnesses that they had seen the incident cannot be disputed at all. 7.   That  brings   us  to   the  question   whether   their identification of  the two  appellants as the miscreants can be safely  relied upon.  So far as the identification of A-1 is concerned we find that he (A-1) was known to both of them from before.   In such circumstances their identification of A-1 as  one of the two miscreants who assaulted the deceased with a  stone can  not be  questioned.  Resultantly, we need not deal  with or  delve into  the  circumstantial  evidence pressed   into service  by the  prosecution to  buttress the evidence of  the eye  witnesses in  proof of  the accusation levelled against A-1. 8.   The  same   cannot,  however,   be  said   about  their identification of  A-2  as  the  other  miscreant  for  they admitted that  they saw  him for the first time on that day. In view  of their above admission and in absence of any T.I. parade held  for identification of A-2 immediately after his arrest, we  find  it  difficult  to  solely  rely  upon  the identification of A-2 by the witnesses for the first time in Court and  that too  after a  lapse of  almost one  and half years after the incident.

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9.   It is  of course true that the prosecution led evidence through P.W.1,  father of  the deceased, to prove that about an hour  earlier before  the incident both A-1 and A-2 came, and accompanied  by  the  deceased  left  his  house.    The evidence of P.W.1, so far as it relates to identification of A-1, cannot  also be  relied upon for even though he claimed to have  known A-2  from before,  in the  F.I.R. he  did not mention the  name of  A-2.   When he was confronted with his such material  omission he  asserted that  he mentioned  the name of  A-2 but  he could  not assign any reason why it did not find  place in  his report.    The  evidence  of  P.W.1, therefore, does  not come in aid of the prosecution to prove that A-2  was the  other  miscreant.    As  from  the  other circumstantial  evidence  such  an  irresistible  conclusion cannot be  drawn, he is therefore entitled to the benefit of doubt. 10.  On the  conclusions as  above we  allow Criminal Appeal No. 683 of 1991 filed by Raju @ Rajendra (A-2) and set aside the conviction  and  sentence  recorded  against  him  under Section 302/34  I.P.C.. The  appellant, who  is in  jail, be released forthwith.   The other appeal (Criminal) Appeal No. 695 of  1997)  preferred  by  Rajya  alias  Raju  (A-1)  is, however, dismissed.