14 December 2007
Supreme Court
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RAMPAL Vs STATE OF U.P.

Bench: S.B. SINHA,HARJIT SINGH BEDI
Case number: Crl.A. No.-000465-000465 / 2006
Diary number: 2854 / 2006
Advocates: RAMESHWAR PRASAD GOYAL Vs KAMLENDRA MISHRA


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CASE NO.: Appeal (crl.)  465 of 2006

PETITIONER: Ram Pal  & Anr.

RESPONDENT: State of U.P.

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 14/12/2007

BENCH: S.B. SINHA & HARJIT SINGH BEDI

JUDGMENT: J U D G M E N T  

HARJIT SINGH BEDI, J.

1.      This appeal by special leave arises out of the following  facts. 2.      One Lal Singh had three sons, Hari Singh, Jaswant  Singh and Birbal Singh.  Brij Pal Singh PW 1, Ved Pal and  Gajender Singh are the sons of Birbal Singh whereas Suraj  Bhan, Netar Pal and Satbir Singh are the sons of Jaswant  Singh and Ram Pal and Ram Saran, the accused are the sons  of Hari Singh.  Hari Singh predeceased his father Lal Singh  whereafter the joint land holding was partitioned by Lal Singh  between his sons Jaswant Singh and Birbal Singh and the  sons of Hari Singh deceased in equal shares retaining 18  bighas for himself.  About 2-3 years prior to the incident Ram  Pal Singh staked a claim that the tube well on the land was  his exclusive property on the plea that the electricity  connection was in his father\022s name. Several civil and criminal  litigations followed on account of this dispute and certain  other matters with the result that the relations between the  accused and Birbal Singh degenerated to an all time low and  about two days prior to the occurrence, an altercation had  taken place between Birbal Singh and his son Brij Pal Singh  on the one side and the accused on the other, relating to the  use of the tubewell water.  At about 8.30 A.M. on 20th June  1991, Birbal Singh accompanied by his brother Jaswant Singh  and his son Brij Pal Singh left the village to go to  Muzaffarnagar for purchase of house-hold articles when they  were accosted by the two accused, Ram Pal carrying his  licensed DBBL .12 bore shotgun, and Ram Saran armed with  a country made pistol and  the accused fired a shot each in  quick succession hitting Birbal Singh killing him  instantaneously Jaswant Singh and Brij Pal Singh saved  themselves by lying prone on the ground.  The incident was  also witnessed by several other persons who were passing by  amongst them being Harvir Singh PW 2, Tejvir Singh PW 3,  Amar Singh and Matroo Singh and on their challenge the  assailants ran away.  Brij Pal Singh PW 1 thereafter rushed to  the village, wrote out a report and then went to police station  Tetawi six kilometers away from the place of incident in a  tractor and handed over the written complaint at 10.30 a.m.  leading to the registration of the FIR.  SHO Brij Mohan Mishra  accompanied by SI Rajinder Singh then reached the place of  occurrence whereafter the SI recorded the inquest proceedings  relating to the murder.  He also picked up a spent cartridge  case and wads of a shotgun cartridge and dispatched the dead  body for the post mortem examination.  He also conducted a

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search of the house of Ram Pal and Ram Saran on 21st June,  1981 and recovered a DBBL gun and 10 live cartridges  licensed to the former therefrom.  The weapon and the  cartridge case were sent to the Forensic Laboratory and its  report revealed that the cartridge had been fired from the right  barrel of the gun in question.  On the completion of  investigation, the accused were charged for offences  punishable under Sections 302/149 I.P.C and they pleaded  not guilty and claimed trial.  3.      The Trial Court held that though the relations between  the parties were strained on account of several factors yet  these differences did not constitute a sufficient reason for the  murder of Birbal, the uncle of the accused, and on the other  hand Brij Pal Singh PW 1 had the motive to implicate the  accused in a false case and as such it was appropriate that the  eye witness account be examined minutely.  The Trial Court  then examined the evidence of the eye witnesses PW1 Brij Pal  Singh, PW 2 Harvir Singh and PW 3 Tejvir Singh and taking  up  of the case of PW 1 Brij Pal Singh first, observed that he  was the  most important witness being the son of the deceased  but his testimony was not trustworthy as he and his brother  had picked up a woman in the year 1979 for which a criminal  case was pending and that another case relating to the murder  of one Nirmal was also pending against him, his brother and  their father.  The Court also observed that Brij Pal Singh had  attempted to cheat his brother Ved Pal and Gajender Singh  and his relatives of the 18 bighas of land left by his grand  father Lal Singh and was therefore a man of such abysmally  low character and mentality that he could not be trusted.  The  Court then examined the statement of Harvir Singh and found  that he was chance and stock witness and as he had earlier  been an eye witness in the case of the murder of one Pradhan.   The Trial Court (on this aspect) observed thus: \023It is a very rare chance (sic) a man to be  witness of two murders in his life time.  In  that case Ld. District & Sessions Judge did  not relied (sic) upon the testimony of  Harbir and the accused persons were  discharged.  The photocopy of the  judgment dated 16.1.1973 passed by ld.  District & Sessions Judge is available on  record.  As it is stated above that Harbir is  very close to the complainant, deceased  and other witnesses.  Harbir stood surety  against the complainant in the case of girl  kidnapping.  He stood surety against  Vedpal, brother of the complainant and  also stood surety against Jaswant, uncle of  the complainant in a case under Section  107/116.  In brief whenever either  complainant or his family members were in  need of surety, Harbir provided his  services.  Such a person who has already  been a witness in a murder case and he  was not relied upon and who is a  permanent surety for the party of the  complainant could not be relied upon  easily\024. 4.         The Trial Court then examined the statement of Tejvir  Singh and observed that he too had been closely associated  with Brij Pal as he had been in college with him in  Muzaffarnagar and that when Tejvir\022s uncle Karan Singh had  been murdered; Jaswant Singh had been one of the witnesses  and that there was no reason whatsoever as to why Tejvir  Singh should have been present in that area at the relevant

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time as he had no field or land in that direction.  The court  then examined the plausibility of the prosecution story and  held that Birbal Singh who was statedly on his way to  Muzafarnagar for purposes of shopping for household goods  was a story which could not be believed as he had not been  wearing shoes or a cap on his head or a vest under his shirt or  an underwear under his dhoti and though there was a tonga  service available from the village to Muzaffarnagar he along  with the others had still chosen to walk to that place.  The  Trial Court accordingly concluded that it appeared that the  deceased had been shot while easing himself and the body had  thereafter been taken out by the murderer(s) and put on the  boundary of the field.  The Court also examined the Forensic  evidence and opined that there was no explanation for the  presence of an empty cartridge at the spot as only one shot  had been fired from each of the two weapons and there was no  need for  a re-loading of the weapons in that situation.  The  Trial Court also observed   that the time of recovery of weapon  being 26 hours after the incident, the Inspector\022s note about  the smell of the gun powder from the right barrel of the gun  could not be believed as the smell could not have been present  after such a long time. Having held as above the Trial Court  acquitted the accused. 5.        The State thereafter preferred an appeal before the  Allahabad High Court.  The Division Bench Court reversed the  findings and convicted the accused under Sections 302/34  I.P.C and sentenced each of them to imprisonment for life.  It  is in these circumstances that the present appeal is before us  by way of special leave. 6.      We have heard learned counsel for the parties very  carefully.  We are conscious of the oft repeated principle that  the High Court should be slow to interfere on a finding of  acquittal recorded by the trial court and if the view taken by  that Court is possible on the evidence, the High Court should  not set it aside on the premise that it was of a different opinion  though it is permissible for it to re-evaluate the entire  evidence.  It is in this background that we must examine the  findings of the High Court in the light of the arguments which  have been addressed before us by the learned counsel for the  parties. 7.      Concededly, the facts of the case show that the parties  are very closely related and on account of the dispute relating  to the tubewell and the 18 bighas of land which had been left  by Lal Singh, the relations between them were extremely  strained.  The High Court accordingly re-assessed the ocular  evidence and held as under: \023However the trial judge has doubted the  testimony of all the three eye witnesses on  one ground or the other for no substantial  reasons.  He doubted the testimony of PW  1 Brij Pal Singh mainly on threefold  grounds  (i) he was involved in an  abduction case of a lady and that case was  still pending at that time, (ii) he alongwith  his father and brothers assaulted Nirmal  and that case was also pending against  him at the time of the occurrence and (iii)  he alongwith his cousin Satvir son of his  Tau Jaswant Singh fabricated the  agreement of sale regarding 18 bighas land  of his grand father Lal Singh debarring his  real brothers, cousins and sons of his  deceased uncle Hari Singh from that  property observing that he was a man of  such character and mentality that he

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could do anything for his self interest.  The  trial judge also observed that inspite of the  fact that civil suit of perpetual injunction  filed by Ram Pal was pending against him  in the civil court he used to irrigate his  land from the tubewell owned by Ram Pal  and his brothers forcibly.  We have given  our anxious consideration to all these  grounds and we are of the view that  neither of these grounds aforesaid got any  substance so as to render this witness Brij  Pal Singh an unreliable person.  If a  person was involved in an abduction case  it can not be said that in fact he was guilty  of that offence.  There may be so many  reasons for involving a person in a case  falsely.  Further, admittedly Brij Pal Singh  alongwith his father and brothers were  being prosecuted for assaulting Nirmal but  admittedly there was a cross-case also  against Nirmal and others initiated at the  instance of Birbal Singh, the deceased  against Mahabir, father of Nirmal and  others.  Regarding the alleged agreement of  sale, without being adjudicated upon by a  court of law it can not be said that it was  fabricated one.  Admittedly those  proceedings ended in compromise and  after the compromise 18 bighas of land  owned by Lal Singh was mutated in the  names of all his legal representatives.  No  doubt, Brij Pal Singh and Jaswant Singh  mentioned in the alleged compromise that  they had not given Rs. 40,000.00 as part  payment to Lal Singh; but in the family  there are so many matters and on what  terms the compromise was reached  between the parties are not known.  Hence  any adverse inference can not be drawn  therefrom as PW 1 Brij Pal Singh stated  that whatever he was directed to write in  the compromise he got the same  mentioned therein for getting the  objections rejected.  Regarding irrigation of  their land by Brij Pal Singh and his  brother from the tubewell, it appears that  the field in which the tubewell was situate  fell to the share of Ram Pal and his  brothers but that tubewell was joint family  property as it was installed in the life time  of Hari Singh and Lal Singh before  consolidation and partitition in the family  and therefore Brij Pal Singh and his father  Birbal claimed their right for irrigation of  their land adjoining thereto from that  tubewell.  Hence for the above, it can not  be said that the character of Brij Pal Singh  was such that he could not be said to be a  responsible person whose sworn testimony  could not be relied upon.

The trial judge further mentioned that PW  2 Harvir Singh and PW 3 Tejvir Singh  were their own persons as whenever Brij  Pal Singh or any member of his family or

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the family of Jaswant Singh got involved  in any case Harvir Singh and Tejvir Singh  stood surety for them.  We have  considered these facts carefully and  cautiously and we are of the view that  there is nothing wrong because if a  person gets involved in some criminal  proceedings and sureties have to be  furnished for his bail the persons  acquainted with him only would stand  surety for him.   It is a matter of common  experience and knowledge that in villages  generally there are party factions due to  one reason or the other and the persons  acquainted with each other share the  problems of each other mutually.  This is  the way rural life goes on.

The trial judge also doubted the  credibility of PW 2 Harvir Singh as  admittedly he was an eye witness in the  murder case of the village pradhan who  was murdered in the year 1974 and again  he appeared as an eye witness in the  instant murder case.  It may be just by  chance that a person resident of the same  village witnesses two murders.  As a man  of conscience and character he should  appear as a witness in the murder case if  he witnessed the murder or was  acquainted with any fact relating thereto.   If a murder case in which he had  appeared as a witness ended in acquittal  and he appeared as an eye witness after  6-7 years in another murder case it  would not be justified to draw a  presumption that he is not a reliable  person and his testimony should be  disbelieved only for that reason.

The trial judge disbelieved the testimony  of PW 3 Tejvir Singh on the ground that  admittedly Satvir Singh son of Jaswant  Singh and this witness Tejvir Singh  studied together in S.D.L College  Muzaffar Nagar and they were class  fellows in B.A. and Brij Pal Singh also  used to study in that very college.  He  also observed that Karan Singh, uncle of  Tejvir Singh (PW 3) had quarrel with one  Bhim and Pratap and in that case  Jaswant Singh  father of Satvir Singh  stood as a witness in favour of Karan  Singh and therefore Tejvir Singh  appeared as a witness in that case  against Ram Pal and Ram Saran  prosecuted for the murder of Birbal  Singh, brother of Jaswant Singh.  In our  view we can not go by these  considerations in believing or disbelieving  the testimony of a witness.  By these  facts we conclude only this much that  this witness should be treated as a  partisan witness whose testimony has to  be scrutinized with care and caution.

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The trial judge also doubted the presence  of PW 3 Tejvir Singh at the scene of  occurrence as he stated that at that time  he was going to the field situate at a short  distance from the scene of occurrence for  cutting fodder as he had taken that field  from Nain Singh on batai whereas DW 1  Nain Singh stated that he had never  given that field to Tejvir Singh on batai.   However this witness Nain Singh was  given a suggestion in his cross- examination that daughter of his cousin  brother and real sister of accused Ram  Pal got married in one and the same  family at village Narsan, District  Saharanpur which he could not deny.  He  only expressed ignorance stating that he  did not know if daughter of his cousin  brother and real sister of accused Ram  Pal were married in one and the same  family at village Narsan, District  Saharanpur.  It may be noted here that  no question regarding this fact was put  up by the defence counsel to PW 3 Tejvir  Singh in his cross-examination.  Hence  the testimony of DW1 Nain Singh is no  better than a got up witness as he might  be denying having given that field to  Tejvir Singh on batai under the influence  of accused Ram Pal.  Moreover, the  presence of a witness at the scene of  occurrence can well be tested in his  cross-examination.  If he has withstood  the test of cross-examination firmly and  his credibility has not been impaired in  his cross-examination his statement will  have corroborative value otherwise not\024.      

8.      The findings aforesaid have been challenged by Mr.  Mahabir Singh, the learned senior counsel appearing for the  accused/appellants.  9.      He has first argued that the eye witnesses\022 account  suffered from serious infirmities. He has pointed out that all  the witnesses were either related to the deceased or were  members of his group and as such their evidence had to be  accepted with care and caution. He has also urged that the  character of the three witnesses did little to enhance their  credibility and that the High Court had not really met the  reasons given by the trial judge in refusing to accept Harvir  Singh\022s presence at the place of incident.  He has in addition  submitted that the High Court had found corroboration from  the forensic evidence in the case but the facts which had come  on the record, belied this evidence as well.  The learned State  counsel has however supported the judgment of the High  Court.   10.     It would be apparent that the fate of the appeal would  primarily rest on the statements of the eye witnesses. We first  take up the case of Brij Pal Singh PW-1.  Concededly, he is the  son of the deceased.  It is clear from his testimony that the  relations between the parties were acrimonious and that there  had been several bouts of litigation between them.  Brij Pal  Singh has clearly stated as to the manner in which the  incident had happened.  His statement finds full support from

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PW Tejvir Singh.  The trial judge had disbelieved Tejvir Singh  on the ground that he was a friend of Brij Pal Singh and had  also been a witness to another murder.  We find that the  matter has been dealt with by the High Court in extenso and  as per the portion quoted above, we find no reason whatsoever  to differ from the opinion expressed with regard to the  presence of Brij Pal Singh and Tejvir Singh.  11.     We however do feel that there is some doubt with regard  to the presence of Harvir Singh.  Concededly, his statement  under 161 of the Code of Criminal Procedure had been  recorded by the police about 22 days after the incident. The  justification for this delay given by PW 10 SHO Brij Mohan  Mishra who stated that Harvir Singh could not be traced  earlier is perhaps not believable.  Even assuming therefore  that there is some doubt as to the presence of Harvir Singh,  we find absolutely no reason to disbelieve the presence of the  other two eye witnesses, the more so as the FIR had been  lodged within two hours of the incident in the police station at  a distance of six miles from the place of incident.  12.      Mr. Mahavir Singh has also seriously challenged the  Forensic evidence in this case by arguing that though the  spent cartridge case had been picked up from the spot on 20th  June, 1981 and the gun recovered the next day, both these  items had been sent to the laboratory only on 17th September,  1981 and as the 22 pellets recovered from the dead body had  not been sent to the laboratory there was no justification in  holding that the weapon had in fact been used in the murder.    In support of his case Mr. Mahabir Singh has relied on  Palia  vs. State of Punjab, 1997 SCC Crl. 383,   Baldev Singh vs.  State of Punjab (1990) 4 SCC 692,  Santa Singh vs.  State  of Punjab AIR 1956 SC 526.    He has also urged that as PW  10 Brij Mohan Mishra in his cross examination had testified  that there were about 7-8 small shots in a .12 bore cartridge,  the recovery of 22 pellets from the dead body and the note  regarding the smell of gun powder from the barrel of the gun,  falsified the prosecution story.                                         13.             We have considered these arguments very carefully.  We first note that the facts that the cartridge case had been  left by assailants at the spot and that the shots had been fired  from a shotgun and a pistol find mention in the FIR.   Interestingly also, there is a suggestion by the defence in the  cross-examination as to whether the spent cartridge had been  found near the dead body or at some distance therefrom.  It is  also clear from the statement of Ram Pal recorded under  Section 313 Cr.P.C. that the gun which was licensed to him  had been recovered from his house along with 11 cartridges.  We have also perused the statement of PW 7 HC Rameshwar  Prasad who stated that the weapon and other articles have  been sent to the Muzafarnagar city Malkhana on 2nd July,  1981 but had been returned to the police station as there was  no place for storage and had been returned to the Malkhana  on 13th July, 1981 awaiting re-transmission to the laboratory.  We also note from the statement of PW 9 Randhir Singh a  retired constable who was at the relevant time the moharrir of  the Malkhana at Muzafarnagar in the police station that the  weapon and cartridge in a sealed condition had been deposited  with him on 2nd July, 1981 and had not been tampered with  till their dispatch to the Forensic Science Laboratory.  We have  also gone through the statement of Om Prakash Tripathi PW  8, the expert in the Forensic Science Laboratory who had  examined the KF .12 bore fired cartridge case and DBBL gun  No.7902082 and had found that the said cartridge had been  fired from the right barrel of the gun.                          14.     Seizing on the fact that 22 pellets had been recovered  from the dead body and that PW 10 SHO Brij Mohan Mishra

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had deposed that a .12 bore cartridge contained only seven to  eight pellets, Mr. Mahabir Singh has submitted that the  prosecution story was on the face of it unacceptable.  We find  absolutely no merit in this plea.  It has come in the evidence of  PW-8 Om Parkash Tripathi that the cartridge used was of KF  make (KF stands for Kirkee Factory).  It is therefore a cartridge  manufactured by the Indian Ordnance Factory, at Kirkee,  which has, off and on, been manufacturing cartridges of shot  sizes BB to 9 only  ( this information has been reconfirmed  from the Secretary, National Rifle Association of India, New  Delhi ).  A 12 bore shotgun cartridge carries a shot charge of  twenty-five to  thirty-five grams in weight and varying number  of pellets based on several factors such as the length of the  cartridge as would be clear from the following chart taken from  Forensic Science in Criminal Investigation and Trials by Dr.  B.R.Sharma (4th Edition) at page 416:

          Projectile charge of Cartridges Number  No.of pellets        Pellets diameter         Pellet weight               Per 28.35 gs.                      mm.                    in gs.

LG                      6                               9.14                    4.54 SG                      8                               8.43                    3.54 Special SG      11                              7.57                    2.58 SSG                     15                              6.83                    1.89 AAA                     35                              5.16                    0.81 BB                      70                              4.09                    0.40 1                      100                              3.63    (.16\024)               0.28 2                       120                             3.41    (.15\024)               0.24 3                       140                             3.25                    0.20 4                       170                             3.05    (.13\024        )       0.17 5                       220                             2.79    (.12\024)               0.13 6                       270                             2.59    (.11\024)               0.10 7                       340                             2.41    (.10\024)               0.08 8                       450                             2.21    (.09\024)               0.06 9                       580                             2.03    (.08\024)               0.05 Dust                   2770                             1.2192          0.0109 ___________________________________________________

N.B. The equivalent in inches of the pellet size shown in  brackets in the third column has been taken from Lyons  Medical Jurisprudence and Toxicology 11th Edition Page 913  and superimposed in the chart.

15.    From the above table it can be concluded that KF  manufactured cartridges can contain between 70 (BB) to 580  (9) pellets per cartridge.  The 7-8 pellets that have been  referred to by PW Brij Mohan Mishra would be pellets of buck  shot such as SG/LG which are not manufactured by the  Kirkee Factory.  The post-mortem report also shows that there  were multiple wounds of entry 1/8th of an inch over the whole  of the chest and upper half of abdomen in an area of 14\024 x  12\024, which confirms Brij Pal\022s statement that the two shots  had been fired from a distance of about 40 or 50 feet.   We are  of the opinion that on account of dispersal of the pellets at  that range, not all would have struck home. The recovery of 22  pellets therefore fits in with the prosecution story.  The  argument based on the gun powder smell from the barrel is  equally without substance.  In Modi\022s Medical Jurisprudence  and Toxicology, 23rd Edition (Page 723) while dealing with the  topic as to \023the time when the weapon was fired\024 it has been

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observed that \023it is never possible to ascertain with any  scientific accuracy the time when a weapon or cartridge was  fired.\024  In this situation, the judgments cited, which are based  on their special facts, have no relevance to the facts of the  present case.  16.      We are therefore of the opinion that no fault can be  found with the judgment of the High Court.  We accordingly  dismiss the appeal.