14 March 1977
Supreme Court
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SATBIR SINGH & ANR. ETC. ETC. Vs STATE OF PUNJAB

Bench: GOSWAMI,P.K.
Case number: Appeal Criminal 178 of 1975


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PETITIONER: SATBIR SINGH & ANR. ETC. ETC.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: STATE OF PUNJAB

DATE OF JUDGMENT14/03/1977

BENCH: GOSWAMI, P.K. BENCH: GOSWAMI, P.K. CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. SHINGAL, P.N.

CITATION:  1977 AIR 1294            1977 SCR  (3) 195  1977 SCC  (2) 263

ACT:             Code  of Criminal Procedure 1973 (Act II of   1974),  S.         378     (Code    of   1898,    s.    417)--Appeal    against         acquittal--Salutary principles in dealing with an appeal.             Evidence  Act (Act I of 1872),  1872--S.  24--Confession         obtained  by the superior officer by questioning  separately         the  accused after several abortive attempts to secure  con-         fession, S. 24 is attracted.

HEADNOTE:             All  the accused were tried for offences  u/s.  302/120B         and  364  I.P.C., but acquitted by the  Additional  Sessions         Judge, Amritsar.  On State’s   appeal against acquittal, the         High Court convicted five of the appellants   (Satbir Singh,         Paramjit Singh, Harbhajan Singh, Shiv Narain and M.P. Singh)         under s. 302/120B I.P.C. and sentenced them to  imprisonment         for  life.   Satbir  Singh was also convicted  on  the  sole         testimony  of  Puran Singh (PW3) u/s.  364 I.P.C.  and  sen-         tenced  to rigorous imprisonment for seven years  and  fine.         The  High Court held the extra judicial confessions made  by         Shiv  Narain and Harbhajan Singh before R.K. Kapur  (PW  41)         the  commander Border Security Force as admissible  in  evi-         dence  before convicting them and rejected the plea  of  en-         counter  on the Indo-Pakistan border.  The High  Court  con-         victed  the   remaining   eight   appellants   (Ajit  Singh,         Darshan  Singh,  Arian Singh, Baghal Singh, Tara Singh, Dial         Singh,  Bachan Singh and Malook Singh) u/s. 364  I.P.C.  and         sentenced them also to rigorous imprisonment for seven years         with fine.             Allowing  the appeals under the Supreme Court  (Enlarge-         ment  of  Criminal Appellate Jurisdiction)  Act,  1971,  the         Court,             HELD:  (1) This was not a fit case where the High  Court         should   have  interfered with the acquittal of any  of  the         appellants.   The High  Court has not at all considered  the         reasons  given  by  the Sessions Judge  for  acquitting  the         accused.   It has given its own reasons for  convicting  the         appellants  but  that  is not enough in  an  appeal  against         acquittal. [205 B-C]             (2)  As  a practical proposition, in an  appeal  against         acquittal, it is always necessary that the reasons given  by

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       the trial court for according  an acquittal should be  exam-         ined  by  the High Court.  If the conclusions of  the  trial         court are not based upon any evidence or they are such as no         reasonable  ’body  of men, properly instructed  in  law  can         reach, on the evidence, or they are so palpably wrong as  to         shock  ’the sense of justice, the High Court will be  justi-         fied  in taking a contrary view by giving its  own  reasons.         It  is   not enough that it is just possible  for  the  High         Court  to  take a  contrary  view.  While  interfering  with         acquittal the judgment of the High Court should  demonstrate         clearly  the  unworthiness of the conclusions of  the  trial         court having regard to all the relevant evidence in  record.         The  High  Court has followed these salutary  principles  in         dealing with an appeal against acquittal. [204 G-H, 205 A]             (3) In deciding whether a particular confession attracts         the  frown of section 24 of the Evidence Act,  the  question         has to be considered from the point of view of the  confess-         ing  accused as to how the inducement. threat  or  pro-raise         proceeding  from a person in authority would operate in  his         mind.             In  the instant case, the extra judicial confessions  by         the two accused Shiv Narain and Harbhajan Singh, have to  be         completely excluded from consideration being hit by s. 24 of         the  Evidence  Act.  When the two accused  were  -questioned         separately after several abortive attempts to secure confes-         sions it cannot be said that there was no inducement, threat         or promise of some kind. [203 H-204 A, E]         196         Observation:             The witness cannot be relied upon by resort to a kind of         special  pleading.  in his aid.  The line of approach  in  a         criminal case in order to find justification for  conviction         on .shaky testimony by making a virtue of the inalertness of         the police administration is not to be commended.

JUDGMENT:             CRIMINAL  APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal  Appeal  Nos.         178179 and 228 of 1975.             (From  the  Judgment and Order dated  10-4-1975  of  the         Punjab  and Haryana High Court in Criminal Appeal No. 40  of         1972).             Frank  Anthony,  Herjinder  Singh and  S.N.  Singh,  for         appellant  No.  1 in Crl. A.178/75 and  appellants  in  Crl.         179/75 and Appellants Nos. 1-2 in Crl. A.228/75.         A.K.  Sen, and Herjinder Singh for appellant No. 2  in  Crl.         A.178/75.             R.L.  Kohli, Rameshwar Nath and Miss Manju Malhotra  for         appellant No. 3 in Crl. A. No. 228/75.             O.P.   Sharma   and  Miss  Kusum  Chaudhury,   for   the         respondents in all the appeals.         The Judgment of the Court was delivered by             GOSWAMI,  J.--These  appeals  under  the  Supreme  Court         (Enlargement of Criminal Appellate Jurisdiction) Act,  1976,         are  directed  against the judgment and order  of  the  High         Court  of Punjab and Haryana convicting five of  the  appel-         lants  (Satbir Singh, Paramjit Singh, Harbhajan Singh,  Shiv         Narain and M.p. Singh) under section 302/120B, Indian  Penal         Code, and sentencing them to imprisonment for life.   Satbir         Singh  was  also convicted on the sole  testimony  of  Puran         Singh  under section 364 IPC and sentenced to  rigorous  im-         prisonment  for  seven years and fine.  The remaining  eight         appellants  (Ajit Singh, Darshan Singh, Arjan Singh,  Baghal         Singh,  Tara  Singh,  Dial Singh, Bachan  Singh  and  Malook

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       Singh) were convicted under section 364 IPC and sentenced to         seven  years rigorous imprisonment and fine.  They  had  all         earlier  been  acquitted by the Additional  Sessions  Judge,         Amritsar.             This  case throws a lurid light on smuggling  activities         at the international India-Pakistan border near Amritsar.             Amongst  the appellants (hereinafter to be described  as         the  accused)  M.P.  Singh was an Inspector  of  the  Border         Security Force (BSF), Shiv Narain was a Sub-Inspector  (BSF)         and  Harbhajan  Singh was a Constable (BSF).   Accused  Ajit         Singh  is  the father of the two accused, Satbir  Singh  and         Paramjit Singh.  Ajit Singh is alleged to be a big ’smuggler         indulging in his smuggling activities at the  India-Pakistan         border  with  his two sons and the other  accused   persons,         namely,  Darshan  Singh,  Arian Singh,  Baghal  Singh,  Tara         Singh,  Dial  Singh, Bachan Singh and Malook Singh.   It  is         alleged  that  Inspector M.P. Singh, S.I.  Shiv  Narain  and         Constable  Harbhajan Singh, along with other  BSF  personnel         were conniving at the smuggling activities of Ajit Singh and         party and were reaping their illegal harvest:.         197             Shingara Singh and his son Hardip Singh and Kartar Singh         are the three deceased whose murders form the subject matter         of  this  case.  While the dead bodies of Hardip  Singh  and         Kartar  Singh  were  found that of Shingara  Singh  was  not         available.             Puran Singh (PW 3) son of Shingara Singh (deceased)  was         a  member  of the gang of smugglers headed by  accused  Ajit         Singh and in the course of smuggling activities there was  a         quarrel with regard to the sharing of money to the extent of         Rs.  15,000/-  which was said to be his due and  which  Ajit         Singh and party were not paying.  A few months prior to July         6, 1970, the date of occurrence, when accused Satbir  Singh,         Jasbir Singh and ten or twelve  labourers  along  with Puran         Singh  smuggled 15 jackets of gold each weighing 1000  tolas         from  Pakistan into Indian territory with the connivance  of         Inspector M.P. Singh and S.I. Shiv Narain (BSF), Puran Singh         succeeded in slipping away under the cover of darkness  with         two  jackets of gold. The gold with which Puran  Singh  fled         away was then worth about Rs. 5 to 6 lakhs.             May  20,  1970: A report was lodged  by  Shingara  Singh         deceased, at Police Station, Gharinda, alleging that his son         Puran Singh (PW 3) who had been carrying on smuggling activ-         ities with the sons of accused Ajit Singh was taken away  by         accused Satbir Singh and some others (not before us) on  May         6,  1970, in a car.  He did not then suspect anything.   But         now he had a firm suspicion that Satbir Singh, Jasbir  Singh         and  Paramjit  Singh, sons of Ajit Singh  of  Village  Burj,         Rajinder Singh and Makhan Singh, had abducted his son  Puran         Singh  over a dispute about .the smuggled gold and they  had         kept him concealed at some unknown place with the  intention         to kill him.  On receipt of this report a case under section         364  IPC  was registered by S.I. Baldev. Singh  (PW  63)  at         Police Station, Gharinda (Ex. P.P.Y.).             July  7,  1970:  A report was sent  to  Police  Station,         Gharinda   by accused Shiv Narain, S.I. (BSF) about  an  en-         counter of  BSF  with smugglers on the mid-night of July  6,         1970,  on the border of India Pakistan at Border Pillar  No.         100 near Amritsar that "two sikh young men" fall dead to the         fire opened by the Border Security Force of the Indian side.             July 17, 1970: The first information report (Ex.  PPZ/R)         of  the present case was registered by Police Station,  Gha-         rinda,  on  the report dated July 12, 1970 (Ex.  P.P.Z.)  of         D.S.P. Surjit Singh (PW 64) which, inter alia, disclosed:                           "I heard a rumour on 8th July, 1970, on my

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                     return  from casual leave that  three  persons                       namely  Shingara  singh son  of  Inder  Singh,                       Kartar  Singh son of Mangal Singh  and  Hardip                       Singh son of  Shingara  Singh  jats  residents                       of  Ranike, Police Station Gharinda  had  been                       abducted  forcibly by Ajit singh of  Burj  and                       his  sons  residents of village  Burj,  Police                       Station  Gharinda and party from near  Crystal                       Chowk, Amritsar and that they had, been  shown                       killed  in  an encounter  in  connivance  with                       Border Security Force  and Pak Rangers".         198         This  report of D.S.P. Surjit Singh has discounted  the  en-         counter  story as a fib but yet it continued to be  the  de-         fence  of  the accused. According to the  trial  court  "the         encounter version appears to be true".             Were the three persons, Shingara Singh, Hardip Singh and         Kartar  Singh, killed in an encounter with the BSF  or  mur-         dered  in pursuance of a conspiracy .to abduct and murder  ?         While  the  first  part of the question  need  not  even  be         proved, the second part must needs  be proved to the hilt.             The  prosecution case further is that Puran Singh  after         having  been  taken away from his village was taken  to  the         Haveli of Ajit Singh where he was asked about the gold which         he had stolen away. Puran Singh informed the accused persons         that  he  ’had  delivered the gold to  his  brother,  Hardip         Singh.  It is alleged that Puran Singh  was afterwards taken         to  the border and left with accused M.P. Singh and  accused         Shiv  Narain who later on handed over ’him to   Shaffi   and         Yakub,  two  Pakistan smugglers and the latter took  him  to         village  Dial  (Pakistan).  Puran Singh was brought  to  the         Indian  side of the border on the night intervening 6th  and         7th July, 1970, but was again taken back to Pakistan  where-         from he could manage to escape  and cross over to the Indian         side of border only on November 6, 1970, to figure as an eye         witness to the murder of his father.             It  is  alleged that on July 6,  1970,  Shingara  Singh,         Hardip  Singh  and Kartar Singh  (all  deceased)  along.with         Harnam  Singh (PW 5) went. to Amritsar.  Shingara Singh  and         Hardip  Singh   had  gone to attend court, Kartar  Singh  to         sell his vegetables and Harnam Singh to attend to his  wife,         Smt.  Piaro, who was a patient in the V.J.  Hospital.  After         being  free  from their work at about 1.00  p.m.  the  three         deceased  along  with Harnam Singh (PW 5) went  towards  the         V.J. Hospital. When they had reached Crystal Chowk on way to         the  Vijay  Hospital a big vehicle and a car came  from  the         side  of the Railway Station, in which accused  Ajit  Singh,         Jasbir  Singh  (absconder),  accused  Satbir  Singh,  Satara         (absconder),  accused Paramjit Singh, accused Baghal  Singh,         accused_  Tara  Singh, accused Arian Singh,  accused  Bachan         Singh,   accused  Darshan  Singh,  Pritu.  (Pritam    Singh)         (acquitted),  accused  Malook Singh and accused  Dial  Singh         with two other; Jetsons in police uniforms (Pamma and Malki-         at) were travelling. ’These persons were armed with guns and         revolvers.   The accused came out of the vehicle and  physi-         cally  lifted Shingara Singh, Hardip Singh and Kartar  Singh         and  whisked them away in the said vehicles.  It is  alleged         that the deceased persons were first taken to the HaveIi  of         Ajit  Singh in village Burj where they were  belaboured  and         later on, blindfolded and tied, removed to the Indo-Pakistan         border where on  that night some goods were to be  exchanged         between the accused  with Balkar Singh (PW 4) and the Pakis-         tani smugglers.  Accused M.P. Singh was also present  there.         At about mid-night all of them including accused Shiv Narain         and accused Harbhajan Singh moved near Pillar No. 100.  This

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       party  handed  over  1-1/4 maunds of  silver  to  Yakub  and         Shaffi,  Pakistani  smugglers and received  gold  in  return         Hardip Singh and Kartar Singh were brought by accused Satbir         Singh  and  others  towards Indian side of  the  border  but         Shingara Singh         199         was left behind with the Pakistani smugglers.  Balkar  Singh         (PW  4)  then  enquired as to why Shingara  Singh  had  been         handed  over  to Pakistanis.  At that  moment  accused  Shiv         Narain  fired  two  shots with very light  pistol.   Accused         Harbhajan  Singh,   accused  M.P.  Singh,  accused  Paramjit         Singh  and accused Satbir Singh also fired shots  at  Hardip         Singh and Kartar Singh from a distance of 25 yards who  then         dropped  dead.  Accused Jasbir Singh (absconder) came  there         and untied their hand’s and removed the cloth covering their         eyes.  A rifle was placed near the dead body of Hatdip Singh         and a Kitpan was placed near the dead body of Kartar  Singh.         Balkar  Singh (PW 4) also heard the sound of a fire shot  in         Pakistan  territory  when  Ajit Singh  (accused)  said  that         Shingara Singh had also been killed.             According to the prosecution to justify the  killing  of         Hardip  Singh and Kartar Singh, accused M.P. Singh,  accused         Shiv Narain and accused Harbhajan Singh with other officials         of BSF, manipulated an encounter story and got a false  case         registered at Police Station, Gharinda, on July 7, 1970 (Ex.         P.P.  O/1) on a "ruqa" having been sent by S.I. Shiv  Narain         (accused)  falsely  alleging, inter alia, that on  a  secret         information  having  been received by Inspector  M.P.  Singh         (accused)  that some Smugglers would bring some  goods  from         Pakistan  to  India they conducted an.  ambush  behind  Burj         (Border Pillar) No. 100 on the night intervening 6th and 7th         July,   1970,  and during the process in  defence  the  Naka         party  fired which resulted  in killing of two  persons  who         were  subsequently  identified as Hardip  Singh  and  Kartar         Singh.             The accused persons were charged under section  364/120B         IPC for abducting Puran Singh.  They were also charged under         section  364/120B IPC for abducting Shingara  Singh,  Hardip         Singh   and Kartar Singh.  They were further  charged  under         section  302/102B IPC for causing the death of Kartar  Singh         and Hardip Singh.  They were also charged under section  109         IPC for abetting the murder of Shingara Singh which  offence         was committed in consequence of the abetment.             The  prosecution  examined 68  witnesses.   The  accused         denied  the charges and the BSF accused suggested  a  motive         for  the prosecution by alleging animus against  the  D.S.P.         Surjit  Singh  (PW 64). According to them Kartar  Singh  and         Hardip  Singh were killed as a result of an  encounter  with         smugglers on the border.             The Sessions Judge giving his reasons for not  accepting         the  evidence of the eye witnesses and other  material  evi-         dence  acquitted all the accused.  The High Court on  appeal         confirmed the acquittal of two accused, namely, Pritam Singh         and  Mehar Singh, but convicted the appellants as  mentioned         above.            With regard to the charge under section 302/120B IPC  the         case will depend upon the evidence of Puran Singh (PW 3) and         the  extrajudicial confession by the accused,  Shiv   Narain         and  Harbhajan 14--240SCI/77         200         Singh, before R.K. Kapur (PW 41).  With regard to the charge         under  section 364 IPC the prosecution rests   upon   Hamare         Singh (PW 5) and also upon the evidence of Gurdial Singh (PW         10),  Inspector  Gurmukh Singh (PW 11) and  Constable  Amrik         Singh  (PW 46) with regard to the Roznamcha entry  (Ex.  PP.

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       A).   We  may  also note here that Puran Singh  (PW  3)  and         Balkar Singh (PW 4) were the two eye witnesses to the murder         and Balkar Singh (PW 4) was disbelieved both by the Sessions         Judge  and  the High Court. Harnam Singh (PW 5) is  an  eye-         witness to abduction.  We should also note that Gutdip Singh         (PW  14), Atma Singh (PW 27) and Mohinder Singh (PW 28)  who         were witnesses with regard to the charge  of abduction  were         also  disbelieved  both by the Sessions Judge and  the  High         Court.  Harnam Singh (PW 5) who is the eye-witness to abduc-         tion  was disbelieved by the Sessions Judge but  partly  be-         lieved by the High Court.             In the above state of the evidence Mr. Sharma  appearing         on  behalf  of the state rests his case on the  evidence  of         Puran Singh (PW 3) and the extra-judiCial confession made by         the  accused  Shiv Narain  and Harbhajan Singh  before  R.K.         Kapur  (PW 41) with regard to  the murder charge under  sec-         tion  302/120B IPC.  He also relies upon the  Roznamcha  and         the recoveries.             We will therefore first examine the reasons given by the         Sessions Judge for acquitting the accused.  After  narrating         the  facts  deposed to by Puran Singh (PW  3)  the  Sessions         Judge  held that "the story on the face of it appears to  be         false".   According to Puran Singh (PW 3) the  accused  took         him away to Ajit Singh’s Haveli and then to  the  Indo-Paki-         stan  border only with a view t9 recover the gold  which  he         had earlier managed to steal away. _ The Sessions Judge took         note of the fact that Puran Singh had told the accused  that         the gold was lying with his brother, Hardip Singh.  It  was,         therefore,  inconceivable that this clue with regard to  the         gold  would not be pursued by the accused and  Hardip  Singh         would be left out and Puran Singh alone would be taken away.         This  witness  even  after he had Seen the  murder  of   his         father  Shingara Singh, on July 6, 1970, stayed in  Pakistan         for  about four months without disclosing this fact to  any-         body  nor  did he communicate about it to any of  his  rela-         tions.   Although  this witness said that he   crossed  from         Pakistan  to India only on November 6, 1970, after the  mur-         der,  and was arrested and interrogated by S.I. Jai Ram  (PW         58)  and was also prosecuted for crossing the border,  there         is  no evidence from any police officer, nor even from  S.I.         Jai Ram (PW 58).  No documentary evidence, which would  have         been  available if his statement Was true, was  produced  in         the case.  Apart from that, this witness stated that he  was         arrested  by S.I. Jai Ram and he narrated the entire  occur-         rence  to him.  S.I. Jai Ram does not Support him.   On  the         other  hand  he  had earlier stated  before  the  committing         Magistrate  that  he did not tell anything  about  the  said         murders to S.I. Jai Ram.             The  Sessions Judge also note several  discrepancies  in         his evidence and finally came to the conclusion that he  was         not actually present at the’ time of the murders nor was  he         abducted by the accused as alleged.         201             The  High Court does not appear to have closely  consid-         ered the treasons given by the SesSions Judge for disbeliev-         ing the testimony of Puran Singh.  it is difficult to appre-         ciate   how  the High  Court can say that the  statement  of         this  witness  "seems to be quite natural" in  view  of  the         infirmities pointed out by the Sessions Judge.  After  exam-         ining the entire discussion of the evidence of this  witness         by the High Court, we are not satisfied that the High  Court         was  right  in relying upon the testimony of  this  witness.         It  is  pointed out that the High Court was not  correct  in         observing that "it is not disputed that he (Puran Singh)  is         being tried for having come to Indian territory on  November

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       6,  1970 and the moment he entered the Indian territory,  he         was taken into custody and his statement was recorded by the         police".  On the other hand the Sessions Judge found just to         the  contrary and there is no reference in the  judgment  of         the High Court to the discussion by the Sessions Judge  with         regard to this aspect.         We have next to see the reasons given by the Sessions  Judge         for disbelieving the testimony of Harnam Singh (PW 5).  This         witness  gave  evidence  about the abduction  of  the  three         deceased from the Crystal Chowk, near V.J. Hospital,  Amrit-         sar.  The witness is a near relation of the deceased and  he         admitted  that  when  the three deceased  were  abducted  he         suspected  that the accused might inflict injuries on  their         person.  Even so he did not go for police assistance nor did         he  inform  even  Mangal  Singh  (PW  17),  father  of   the         deceased  .Kartar Singh, about the occurrence  although  the         latter was residing with him in the same house.  He also did         not- ask the relations of the deceased  to ’lodge any report         with  the  police. Crystal Chowk is a busy  commercial  area         where  there are shops and some residential houses  and  the         shops  were open at the time of the incident.  Even so  this         witness  stated that there were no shops or bazar  near  the         place of occurrence. This witness named five accused persons         including  two absconders  and stated that he knew  them  by         names about one year prior to the occurrence.  Since he  had         named accused Paramjit Singh and accused Satbir Singh in the         committing  court he was asked there to identify  these  two         accused.  He, however, wrongly pointed towards accused  M.P.         Singh  as Paramjit Singh and accused Pritam Singh as  Satbir         Singh. Accused M.P. Singh was not even alleged to be present         at Amritsar at the time of abduction.  Although this witness         stated  that  he  informed Kabal Singh (PW  6)   brother  of         Shingara Singh, Kabal Singh did not corroborate him on  this         point.         Further,  Harnam Singh (PW 5) states about abduction of  the         three deceased from Crystal Chowk.  The High Court   accepts         his  evidence as being corroborated by  witnesses  regarding         his  presence at Amritsar with the three  deceased  persons.         It is difficult to see how because his presence at  Amritsar         is proved the further fact about the abduction of the  three         deceased  from Crystal Chowk is also established.  There  is         no  corroboration whatsoever of this part of the  story.  If         the High Court has to look for corroboration of the evidence         of  Harnam Singh even about his presence at Amritsar on  its         own  reasoning, the principal part of the  prosecution  case         about abduction depending upon his sole testimony cannot  be         held to be established.  The         202         High Court also seeks to find corroboration of this ’part of         the case from Roznamcha of July 6, 1970 (Ex. P.P. A) wherein         a  certain  information from an undisclosed source  was  re-         ceived  at 2.00 P.M. by Gurdial Singh (PW 10) to the  effect         "that  there  was  some fight between  some  smugglers  near         Crystal  Chowk or some legislator had been abducted".   This         information  is hearsay in absence of the  informant.   The.         name  of  the informant is not even disclosed.   Apart  from         this,  this Roznamcha does not corroborate Harnam Singh  (PW         5)  with  regard to his statement that  the  three  deceased         persons  were  abducted by the accused from  Crystal  Chowk.         The  High  Court did not fail to observe  that  the  reasons         given  by  the witness for his belated  examination  by  the         police  as "padding obviously.. at the instance of  the  po-         lice".  Even so, the High Court explained away the fact’  of         Harnam Singh’s not reporting to the police ’in a very unusu-         al  way.       The High Court observed firstly that  it  was

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       natural for the witness not to be involved in the dispute of         smugglers  and secondly that there was no use informing  the         police as no petty police officer would take action  against         the  international  smugglers.  The High Court  went  on  to         record  that "it appears in the present  day  administration         that no petty police officer is likely to take  responsibil-         ity in’ the  matter of  prosecuting international  smugglers         without  having the blessings of the highest police  officer         in  the  district and even above".  Witnesses,  like  Harnam         Singh,  were, therefore, according to the High Court  "help-         less".   We cannot commend this line of approach in a crimi-         nal  case  in order to find jurisdiction for  conviction  on         shaky  testimony  by making a virtue of the  inalertness  of         the  police  administration.  The witness cannot  be  relied         upon by resort to a kind of special pleading in his aid.  We         find that the High Court has not given any cogent reason for         taking  a different view with regarding to the  appreciation         of evidence of this witness by the Sessions Judge.             About recovery of fire-arms and gold at the instance  of         some of the accused, the case rested on the evidence of  the         police  officers  alone.  The other  search  witnesses  were         declared  hostile  on account of their  not  supporting  the         prosecution.  The Sessions Judge did not feel it safe to act         upon  the testimony of police witnesses including  Inspector         Bachan  Singh (PW 68) in the matter of disclosure  statement         as  well  as  of recovery of the fire-arms and  of  gold  in         absence of corroboration by independent witnesses.  The High         Court  held  that  there was  no reason  to  disbelieve  the         police witnesses.  But when both the Sessions Judge and  the         High  Court seem to be in agreement in finding   that  there         was "padding" by the police in respect of evidence  produced         in  the case, it could not be said that the  Sessions  Judge         was so grievously in error that contrary appreciation of the         evidence was  compelling under the circumstances.             There is also the evidence with regard to extra-judicial         confessions  said  to  have been made by  the  accused  Shiv         Narain  and Harbhajan Singh before R.K. Kapur (PW  41),  the         Commandant of the Border Security Force.  The Sessions Judge         has  considered that evidence as inadmissible under  section         24 of the Evidence Act.         203             The  High Court, differing from the opinion of the  Ses-         sions Judge, held the extra-judicial confession as  admissi-         ble  in  evidence since, according to the  High  Court,  "it         cannot  be held that he (Kapur) gave any threat;  inducement         or promise to the accused".  The High Court observed:         .lm10                      "When  this (warning) was conveyed to  the  ac-                  cused by Shri Handa D.S.P., the accused still stuck                  to the encounter versions and made their statements                  in writing  supporting the encounter version.   The                  said threat of Shri Kapur P.W. did not work and the                  accused  stuck to their old story  ......It was  on                  19th  July,  1970 that Shiv  Narain  and  Harbhajan                  Singh were questioned separately when he told  them                  that   they  should  come"  out  with   the   truth                  otherwise  .they would them˜ selves be  responsible                  for  their  actions and if they had  done  anything                  wrong,  they  would go to jail. Instead  of  giving                  them any promise of help, he in fact told them that                  if  they  were  in  the wrong,  they  would  go  to                  jail   ....   From the statement of  this  witness,                  which I have gone through minutely, it is difficult                  to  hold  that he gave any  inducement,  threat  or                  promise  to the accused persons and that  the   ac-

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                cused  persons  made the confessions  in  pursuance                  thereof".             Section  24 of the Indian Evidence Act provides  that  a         confession  made  by an accused person is  irrelevant  in  a         criminal proceeding, if the making of the confession appears         to  the court to have been caused by any inducement,  threat         or  promise,  having  reference to the  charge  against  the         accused  person, proceeding from a person in  authority  and         sufficient, in the opinion of the court, to give the accused         person  grounds, which would appear to. him reasonable,  for         supposing  that by making it he would gain any advantage  or         avoid  any  evil of a temporal nature in  reference  to  the         proceedings against him.             Indeed,  Mr. Kapur was a person in authority  being  the         Commandant of the rank of a Senior Superintendent of  Police         and  the  confessing accused were his  subordinates.   Apart         from  this,  it  appears from his evidence-  that  the  oral         confessional  statements were not readily  forthcoming  from         the  accused  persons  but they had to  be  interrogated  on         several  occasions.   He  further advised  D.S.P.  Handa  to         interrogate them "with a warning that they should state  the         truth  otherwise  they would not be supported by  me".   Mr.         Kapur further admitted in his cross-examination that he "did         tell  Mr.  Handa on telephone  on 10th July,  1970  that  he         should  give  a warning to Border Security Force  people  to         come  out  with  truth otherwise they  themselves  would  be         responsible  for  their actions".  Mr.  Kapur  also  himself         "enquired from M.P. Singh and Shiv Narain accused about  the         matter  on  19th July, 1970 telling them that now  that  the         case has been registered they should state the truth".             In deciding whether a particular confession attracts the         frown  of section 24 of the Evidence Act, the  question  has         ,to be considered         204         from  the point of view Of the confessing accused as to  how         the  inducement, threat or promise proceeding from a  person         in authority would operate in his mind.             It  is  true  that Mr. Kapur, in  his  evidence,  denied         having  held out: to the accused any inducement,  threat  or         promise.   We,  however, find. that on July 1-7,  1970,  the         police  gave a go by to the encounter story and the  present         case was registered against the accused.  Two days after, on         July  19, 1970, Mr. Kapur having already failed to get   any         confessional statement from the accused through other  agen-         cy,  took upon himself to question accused Shiv  Narain  and         Harbhajan  Singh  separately and this time he  succeeded  in         securing confessional statements.  When the two accused were         questioned.  separately after several abortive  attempts  to         secure  confessions, can it be said that there’ was  no  in-         ducement,  threat or promise of some kind  proceeding  from.         Mr. Kapur to have made any impact on their minds  ’resulting         in the confessions ?  Mr. Kapur having stated to the accused         on  July 19, 1970, that "now that the case has  been  regis-         tered they should state the truth", it is difficult to  hold         that by this statement he would not generate in the minds of         the  accused some hope and assurance that if’ they told  the         "truth" they would receive his "support" which he had earli-         er’ conveyed to them through D.S.P. Handa.  It is true  that         in the course of cross-examination Mr. Kapur stated that  he         had  told the accused that if they had done  anything  wrong         they  would go to jail.  But having regard to the effect  of         the totality of the evidence of this witness, we are  unable         to hold that the confessions made by the accused before  Mr.         Kapur on July 19, 1970, were free from the taint of infirmi-         ty  within the mischief of section 24 of the Evidence  Act.’

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       We  are, therefore, clearly of opinion that the  extra-judi-         cial confessions by the two accused, Shiv Narain and Harbha-         jan Singh, have to be completely excluded from consideration         being hit by section 24 of the Evidence Act.             Similarly not much can be made of abscondence of certain         accused when other material evidence connecting the  accused         with the crime has failed in this case.             A serious infirmity in the judgment of the High Court is         that  it has not at all considered the reasons given by  the         Sessions  Judge for acquitting the accused.  The High  Court         has given its own reasons for convicting the appellants  but         that is not enough in an appeal against’ acquittal.             As a practical proposition, in an appeal against acquit-         tal,  it is always necessary that the .reasons given by  the         trial court for recording an acquittal should be examined by         the  High Court.  If the conclusions of the trial court  are         not based upon any evidence or they are such as no  reasona-         ble  body of men, properly instructed in law, can reach,  on         the evidence, or they are so palpably wrong as to shock  the         sense of justice, the High Court will be justified in taking         a contrary view by giving its own reasons.  It is not enough         that  it is just Possible for the High Court to take a  con-         trary   view.  While  interfering  with acquittal the  judg-         ment of the High Court should demonstrate clearly         205         the  unworthiness  of  the conclusions of  the  trial  court         having  regard to all the relevant evidence in  record.   We         are  unable to say in these appeals that the High Court  has         followed these salutary principles in dealing with an appeal         against acquittal.             We  may also observe that the High Court need  not  have         mentioned the fact that the Sessions Judge was "suspended on         account   of corruption charges".  If we may say so, it  was         absolutely unnecessary to refer to this in disposing of  the         appeal.             We  are clearly of opinion that this was not a fit  case         where the High Court should have interfered with the acquit-         tal  of  any of  the appellants.  The appeals  are  allowed.         The  judgment and order of the High Court are set aside  and         the appellants are acquitted of all the charges.  The appel-         lants,  Satbir Singh, Paramjit Singh, Harbhajan Singh,  Shiv         Narain  and  M.P.  Singh shall be  released  from  detention         forthwith.   The remaining appellants, Ajit  Singh,  Darshan         Singh,  Arjan Singh, Baghal Singh, Tara Singh,  Dial  Singh,         Bachan  Singh and Malook Singh, who have been on bail  shall         be discharged from their bail bonds         S.R.                                    Appeals allowed.         206