02 May 1974
Supreme Court
Download

STATE OF U.P. Vs RAM SWARUP & ANR.


1

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 12  

PETITIONER: STATE OF U.P.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: RAM SWARUP & ANR.

DATE OF JUDGMENT02/05/1974

BENCH: CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. BENCH: CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH KRISHNAIYER, V.R.

CITATION:  1974 AIR 1570            1975 SCR  (1) 409  1974 SCC  (4) 764  CITATOR INFO :  R          1977 SC 170  (6)  F          1980 SC 660  (16)  R          1990 SC1459  (21)

ACT: Criminal Law--Murder--Private defence, right of. Appeal--Appeal  against acquittal--Locus standi of State  to appeal under article 136.

HEADNOTE: G and deceased M were trade rivals.  At about 7 a.m. G  went to  purchase  a  basket of melons from  the  deceased.   The deceased declined to sell it. Hot words followed.  G left in a  huff.  An hour later G went to the market with his son  R and  two other sons.  G had a knife R a gun and  the  others carried  lathis.   They advanced  aggressively  towards  the deceased who attempted to retreat.  R shot him dead at point blank  range.  The Learned Sessions Judge convicted R  under section  302  and sentenced him to death.  G  was  convicted under section 302 read with section 34 and was sentenced  to imprisonment for life.  The other two sons were acquitted of all  the  charges.  On appeal, the High Court  of  Allahabad acquitted  R and G and confirmed the acquittal of the  other sons. HELD  :  Confirming  the acquittal of G  but  restoring  the conviction of R and awarding life sentence, (i)  The burden which rests on the prosecution to  establish its case beyond reasonable doubt is neither neutralised  nor shifted  because  the accused pleads the  right  of  private defence.    The  prosecution  must  discharge  its   initial traditional  burden  to  establish  the  complicity  of  the accused  and  until  it does so, the  question  whether  the accused  has  acted in self defence or not does  not  arise. The  Sessions Court accepted the evidence of  5  prosecution witnesses  after a careful Secreting and the High Court  was unduly  suspicious of that evidence in the name of  caution. Caution  is safe and unfailing guide in the judicial  armory but a cautious approach does not justify an a priori assump- tion that the case is surrounded in suspicion.  Murders  are not committed by coolly weighing the pros and cons. [412C-F, H; 414A]

2

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 12  

(ii) The right of private defence is a right of defence. not of a retribution.  It is available in face of imminent peril to those who act in good faith and in no case can the  right be  conceded  to a person who  stage-manages  the  situation wherein the right can be used as a shield to justify an  act of  aggression.   Evidently the accused went to  the  market with  a  preconceived design to pick up a quarrel. It  is  a necessary incident of the right of private defence that  the force  used must bear a reasonable proportion to the  injury to  be averted.  There was no justification for killing  the deceased  selectively.  The right of defence ends  with  the necessity  for it.  When a person is accused of  an  offence the  burden  of  proving  the  existence  of   circumstances bringing  the case within any of the general  exceptions  in the  Penal Code is upon him and the court shall presume  the absence of such circumstances.  The right of private defence constitutes  a general exception to the offences defined  in the  Penal Code.  The burden which rests on the  accused  to prove the exception is not of the same rigour as the  burden of  the prosecution to prove the charge beyond a  reasonable doubt.  It is enough for accused to show as in a civil  case that the preponderance of probabilities is in favour of  his plea.   The  respondents  led no  evidence  to  prove  their defence but that is not necessary because such proof can  be offered by relying on the evidence led by, the  prosecution, the  material  elicited by cross-examining  the  prosecution witnesses  and  the  totality  of  facts  and  circumstances emerging out of the evidence in the case.  The conclusion of the  High  Court  in  regard to  Ram  Swarup  being  plainly unsupportable and leading to- a manifest failure of  justice it  was  set  aside  and the order  of  the  Sessions  Court convicting  him  under  section 302 of the  Penal  Code  was restored.   The  sentence  was  however.  reduced  to   life imprisonment  since  the possibility of  scuffle  cannot  be excluded. [414H; 416D-417G] 410 In  regard to G although if this Court was to  consider  the case  independently  it  might have  come  to  a  conclusion different from the one arrived at by the High Court, in view of  the principles governing appeals under Article  136  the order passed by the High Court was not disturbed. [418A-D] (iii)     The  locus  standi of State  Governments  to  file appeals  in this Court against judgments or orders  rendered in criminal matters has been recognised over the years for a valid  reason namely, all crimes raise problems of  law  and order  and some raise issues of public disorder.  The  State Governments are entrusted with the enforcement and execution of  laws  directed  against  prevention  and  punishment  of crimes.   They  have, therefore a vital  stake  in  criminal matters.   The  objection that the State Government  has  no locus standi to file the appeal must be rejected. [421A-C]

JUDGMENT: CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeal No. 192 of 1972. Appeal  by special leave from the Judgment and  order  dated the  13th October, 1971 of the Allahabad High Court in  Crl. A. No. 672 of 1971. D. P. Uniyal and O. P. Rana, for the appellants Frank Anthony, A. K.  Garg, Santokh Singh and Ramesh Sharma, for respondent No. 1. R. K. Garg and Santokh Singh, for respondent No. 2. Nurrudin Ahmed and U. P. Singh, for the complainant.

3

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 12  

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by CHANDRACHUD, J. On the morning of June 7, 1970 in the  Subzi Mandi at Badaun, U.P., a person called Sahib Datta Mal alias Munimji  was shot dead.  Ganga Ram and his three  sons,  Ram Swarup, Somi and Subhash were prosecuted in connection  with that  incident.   Ram Swarup was convicted  by  the  learned Sessions  Judge, Badaun, under section 302, Panel Code,  and was  sentenced  to  death.  Ganga Ram  was  convicted  under section’302  read  with  section 34  and  was  sentenced  to imprisonment  for life.  They were also convicted under  the Arms Act and sentenced to concurrent terms of  imprisonment. Somi  and Subhash were acquitted of all the charges as  also was  Ganga  Ram of a charge under section 307 of  the  Penal Code  in  regard  to an alleged knife-attack  on  one  Nanak Chand. The High Court of Allahabad has acquitted Ganga Ram and  Ram Swarup  in  an appeal filed by them and  has  dismissed  the appeal  filed  by  the  State  Government  challenging   the acquittal  of Somi and Subhash.  In this appeal  by  special leave  we  are concerned only with the  correctness  of  the judgment of acquittal in favour of Ganga Ram and Ram Swarup. Except  for  a  solitary  year,  Ganga  Ram  held  from  the Municipal  Board of Badaun the contract of Tehbazari in  the vegetable  market from 1954 to 1969.  The  deceased  Munimji out-bid Ganga Ram in the annual auction of 1970-71 which led to the day-light outrage of June 7, 1970. 411 At  about  7 a.m. on that day Ganga Ram is alleged  to  have gone  to  the market to purchase a basket  of  melons.   The deceased  declined  to sell it saying that  it  was  already marked  for  another customer.  Hot  words  followed  during which  the deceased, asserting his authority, said  that  he was  the  Thekedar  of the market and his  word  was  final. Offended by this show of authority, Ganga Ram is alleged  to have left in a huff. An  hour  later Ganga Ram went back to the market  with  his three  sons, Ram Swarup, Somi and Subhash.  Ganga Ram had  a knife,  Ram  Swarup  bad a gun and the  two  others  carried lathis.  They threw a challenge saying that they  wanted  to know whose authority prevailed in the market.  They advanced aggressively  to  the gaddi of the deceased  who,  taken  by surprise, attempted to rush in a neighbouring kothari.   But that  was  much too late for before he  could  retreat,  Ram Swarup shot him dead at point-blank range. It  was  at  all stages undisputed that Ganga  Ram  and  Ram Swarup  went to the market at about 8 a.m. that one of  them was armed with a gun and that a shot fired from that gun  by Ram Swarup caused, the death of Munimji. Though  there  was  no  direct evidence  of  the  7  O’clock incident the learned Sessions Judge accepted the prosecution case  that the shooting was preceded by that  incident.   In coming to that conclusion the learned Judge relied upon  the evidence of Sona Ram, Nanak Chand, Shanti Lal, Shariat Ullah and Shiva Dutta Mal (P. Ws. 1 to 5) to whom the deceased had narrated  the incident.  These witnesses were also  examined in  order to establish the main incident and their  evidence in  that  regard  was also accepted by  the  learned  Judge. Having found that these witnesses were trustworthy and  that their evidence established the, case of the prosecution  the learned Judge proceeded to consider whether as contended  by Ganga Ram and Ram Swarup the shot was fired by Ram Swarup in exercise  of the right of private defence.  Adverting  to  a variety  of  circumstances the learned Judge  rejected  that theory  and held that the charges levelled against  the  two accused were, proved beyond a reasonable doubt,

4

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 12  

The  High Court disbelieved the evidence in regard to the  7 O’clock incident.  In any case, according to the High Court, that  incident was far to trifling to lead to  the  shooting outrage.  The High Court accepted the defence version that a scuffle  bad  taken place between the deceased  Munimji  and Ganga  Ram and that Ganga Ram was assaulted with  lathis  by Shiva  Dutta Mal (P.W. 5) and the servants of the  deceased. The High Court concluded :               "If  Ganga Ram was being given repeated  lathi               blows by P.W. Shiva Dutta Mal and, servants of               the   deceased,  then  Ram  Swarup  had   full               justification to fire his gun in the right  of               private  defence of the person of his  father.               It  ’May  be  that the gun  fire  injured  the               deceased, rather               412               than those who were belaboring Ganga Ram  with               lathis.   But once we come to  the  conclusion               that  it  was not unruly that Ram  Swarup  had               used  his  gun in the  circumstances  narrated               above,  i.e. in order to save his aged  father               from   the  clutches  and  assaults   of   his               assailants, he cannot be held guilty of murder               or  for  the  matter  of  that  of  any  other               offence". In regard to Ganga Ram the High Court held that he could not be  found guilty under section 302 read with section 34  "as his  presence in the Subzimandi was not for the  purpose  of killing  the deceased, as suggested by the prosecution,  but he  had  more probably reached there alongwith his  son  Ram Swarup,  on way back from their vegetable farm, in order  to purchase melons. The  burden which rests on the prosecution to establish  its case  beyond a reasonable doubt is neither  neutralised  nor shifted  because  the accused pleads the  right  of  private defence.    The  prosecution  must  discharge  its   initial traditional  burden  to  establish  the  complicity  of  the accused  and  not until it does so can  the  question  arise whether   the  accused  had  acted  in  self-defence.   this position,   though  often  overlooked,  would  be  easy   to understand  if it is appreciated that the Civil Law rule  of pleadings  does  not govern the rights of an  accused  in  a criminal  trial.   Unlike in a civil case, it is open  to  a criminal court to find in favour of an accused on a plea not taken  up by him and by so doing the court does  not  invite the charge that it has made out a new case for the  accused. The accused may not plead that he acted in self-defence  and yet  the court may find from the evidence of  the  witnesses examined  by  the prosecution and the circumstances  of  the case  either that what would otherwise be an offence is  not one because the accused has acted within the strict confines of  his  right  of private defence or that  the  offence  is mitigated  because  the right of private  defence  has  been exceeded.   For a moment, therefore, we will keep apart  the plea  of  the accused and examine briefly  by  applying  the well-known  standard  of proof whether the  prosecution,  as held by the Sessions Court, has proved its case. The  evidence of the five witnesses--Sona Ram, Nanak  Chand, Shanti Lal, Shariat Ullah, Shiva Dutta Mal is consistent and convincing  on the broad points of the case.   The  Sessions Court accepted that evidence after a careful scrutiny and we are  inclined  to the view that the High  Court  was  unduly suspicious  of  that evidence in the name of  caution.   The High Court thought that the evidence of these witnesses must be viewed with great caution because Sona Ram and Shanti Lal

5

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 12  

are the first cousins of the deceased, Nanak Chand and Shiva Dutta  Mal were co-sharers of the deceased in the  Tehbazari contract,  Shariat Ullah was a constituent of  the  deceased and because Sona Ram, Nanak Chand and Shiva Dutta Mal  being co-sharers in the contract should have been moving about the market rather than remain at the gaddi of the deceased where he was shot down.  Caution is a safe and unfailing guide  in the  judicial  armoury  but a  cautious  approach  does  not justify an a priori assumption that the case is shrouded  in suspicion.  This is 413 exemplified  by the rejection of the melon incident  by  the High  Court  on the grounds, inter alia, that there  was  no entry  in the account books of the deceased  evidencing  the sale  of the melon-basket and that the owner of  the  melons was  not called to support the prosecution case.  The  point in  issue was not whether the melon-basket was in truth  and reality sold to another customer, in which case the evidence of  the  owner and the account books of the  deceased  would have some relevance.  The point of the matter was that three was trade rivalry between the deceased and Ganga Ram,  their relations  were  under  a  deep  strain  and  therefore  the deceased declined to sell the melons to Ganga Ram The excuse which  the deceased trotted out, may be true or false.   And indeed,  greater  the  falsity of that  excuse  greater  the affront to Ganga Ram. The  melon incident-formed a prelude to the main  occurrence and  was  its  immediate cause.  By disbelieving  it  or  by treating it alternatively as too trifling the High Court was left  to  wonder why Ganga Ram and Ram Swarup  went  to  the market  armed  with a gun, which they admittedly  did.   The case of the prosecution that they went back to the market to retaliate  against  the highhandedness of the  deceased  was unacceptable to the High Court because "it does not stand to reason  that the appellants and their two  other  companions (sons of Ganga Ram) would walk into the lion’s den in  broad day  light and be caught and beaten up, and even be done  to death  by the deceased, his partners and  servants,  besides hundreds  of  people  who were bound to be  present  in  the Sabzimandi  at about 8 A.M. Such a large congregation  could have  easily  disarmed the appellants and  their  two  other companions  and given_them a thorough beating if not  mortal injuries".   Evidently, they did go to the market  which  to their  way of thinking was not a lion’s den.  And they  went adequately  prepared to meet all eventualities.   The  large congregation of which the Court speaks is often  notoriously indifferent to situations involving harm or danger to others and  it is contrary to common experience that  anyone  would readily accost a gun-man in order to disarm him. The  High Court saw yet another difficulty in accepting  the prosecution case               "Even  if the appellants and their  companions               would have been so very hazardous, they  could               not have exposed their lives by carrying  only               one  cartridge in the gun, if they had  really               gone  to murder the deceased  and make a  safe               retreat.   It might very well have  been  that               the first shot went stray and did not hit  the               deceased.   It  was, therefore,  necessary  to               have  at  least both the barrels  loaded  with               cartridges.   In  fact one  would  expect  the               ready availability of more cartridges with the               appellants,  because they were bound  to  fire               some rounds of shots to create a scare in  the               crowded  Sabzimandi, before making good  their

6

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 12  

             escape.  For this reason also one would expect               them  to  keep both the  barrels  loaded  with               cartridges  and  also  to  carry  some   spare               cartridges  for  the sake of  contingency  and               safety." 414 Murders  like the one before us are not committed by  coolly weighing the pros and cons.  Ganga Ram and Ram, Swarup  were wounded  by .the high and mighty attitude of a  trade  rival and  they  went back to the market in a  state  of  turmoil. They  could  not have paused to bother whether  the  double- barrelled  gun contained one cartridge or two any more  than an  assailant  poised to stab would bother to take  a  spare knife.   On such occasions when the mind  is  uncontrollably agitated,  the  assailants throw security to the  winds  and being momentarily blinded by passion are indifferent to  the ’consequences  of their action.  The High Court  applied  to the mental processes of the respondents a test far too rigid and  unrealistic than was justified by the circumstances  of the case and concluded               "It is noteworthy that P.W. 1 Sona Ram clearly               admits  that Ganga Ram had a farm  in  village               Naushera, which is at a distance of two  miles               from  Badaun.  It is very likely that the  two               appellants  must have been going  every  early               morning  to  have a round of  their  vegetable               farm  and returning home therefrom at about  8               A.M.  in the sultry month of June.  It is  not               surprising  that on such return to  Badaun  on               the  morning  of June 7, 1970  the  appellants               went  to the Sabzimandi in order  to  purchase               melons, when they were called to the Gaddi  of               the  deceased,  ultimately  resulting  in  the               fatal occurrence as suggested by the defence." The High Court assumed without evidence that Ganga Ram  used to  carry a gun to his vegetable farm and the whole  of  the conclusion reproduced above would appear to be based on  the thin premise that Sona Ram had admitted that Ganga Ram had a village farm situated at distance of two miles from  Badaun. We find it impossible to agree with the reasons given by the High  Court as to why Ganga Ram and Ram Swarup went  to  the market  and how they happened to carry a gun with them.   It is  plain  that being slighted by the melon  incident,  they went to the market to seek retribution. The finding recorded by the High Court that the  respondents went  to  the  market for a casual purchase  and  that  they happened to have a gun because it was their wont to carry  a gun  is the very foundation of its acceptance of the  theory of private defence set up by the respondents.  According  to the  High  Court  a routine visit to the market  led  to  an unexpected  quarrel between the deceased and Ganga Ram,  the quarrel  assumed  the  form  of  grappling,  the   grappling provoked the servants of the deceased to beat Ganga Ram with lathis and the beating impelled Ram Swarup to use the gun in defence  of  his  father.  Our view of the  genesis  of  the shooting  incident must, at the very threshold, deny to  the respondents the right of private defence. The  right of private defence is a right of defence, not  of retribution.   It is available in face of imminent peril  to those who act in good faith and in no case can the right  be conceded  to a person who stage-manages a situation  wherein the  right  can  be used as a shield to justify  an  act  of aggression.   If a person goes with a gun to  kill  another, the  intended victim is entitled to act in self-defence  and if be

7

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 12  

415 so acts there is no right in the former to kill him in order to prevent him from acting in self-defence.  While providing for the right of private defence, the Penal Code has  surely not devised a mechanism whereby an attack may be provoked as a presence for killing. Angered by the rebuff given by the deceased while  declining to sell the melons, Ganga Ram went home and returned to  the market with the young Ram Swarup who, on the finding of  the High Court, carried a gun with him.  Evidently, they went to the market with a preconceived design to pick up a  quarrel. What semblance of a right did they then have to be piqued at the  resistance  put up by the deceased and his men  ?  They themselves  were  the lawless authors of  the  situation  in which  they  found  themselves and  though  the  Common  Law doctrine  of "retreat to the wall" or retreat to the  ditch" as expounded by Blackstone(1) has undergone modification and is  not  to be applied to cases where a victim, being  in  a place  where  he has a right to be, is in face  of  a  grave uninvited danger, yet, at least those in fault must  attempt to retreat unless the severity of the attack renders such  a course impossible.  The exemption from retreat is  generally available to the faultless alone.      Quite  apart  from  the consideration  as  to  who  was initially  at  fault,  the  extent of  the  harm  which  may lawfully  be inflicted in self-defence is limited. It  is  a necessary incident of the right of private defence that  the force used must bear a reasonable proportion to- the  injury to  be  averted,  that  is,  the  injury  inflicted  on  the assailant  must  not be greater than is  necessary  for  the protection of the person assaulted. Undoubtedly, a person in fear  of  his life is not expected to modulate  his  defence step  by step or tier by tier for as Justice Holmes said  in Brown  vs. United States (2) "detached reflection cannot  be demanded in the presence of an uplifted knife". But  section 99  provides in terms clear and categorical that "The  right of  private defence in no case extends to the inflicting  of more harm than it is necessary to inflict for the purpose of defence".      Compare for this purpose the injuries received by Ganga Ram with the injuries caused to the deceased in the  alleged exercise of the right of private defence. Dr. N. A.  Farooqi who examined Ganga Ram found that he had four contusions  on his  person  and that the injuries were  simple  in  nature. Assuming  that Ganga Ram had received these injuries  before Ram  Swarup  fired  the fatal shot,  there  was  clearly  no justification  on the part of Ram   Swarup to fire from  his gun  at pointblank range. Munimji was shot on the chest  and the blackening and tabooing around the wound shows that  Ram swarup fired his shot from a very close range. Under section 100  of the Penal Code the right of private defence  of  the body  extends  to  the voluntary causing  of  death  if  the offence which occasions the exercise of the right is of such a  nature as may, to the extent material,  reasonably  cause the apprehension that death or grievous hurt will  otherwise be,  the consequence of the assault. Considering the  nature of injuries received by Ganga Ram, it (1)  Blackstone’s Commentaries, Book IV, p. 185. (2)  (1921) 256 U.S. 416 is  impossible  to  hold that there could  be  a  reasonable apprehension  that  he would be done to death or  even  that grievous hurt would be caused to him. The  presence of blood near the door leading to room  No.  2 and the pellet marks on the door frame show that Ram  Swarup

8

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 12  

fired at the deceased when the latter was fleeing in fear of his   life.    In  any  event,  therefore,  there   was   no justification  for  killing the deceased  selectively.   The right  of  defence ends with the necessity  for  it.   Under section 102, Penal Code, the right of private defence of the body  commences  as  soon as a  reasonable  apprehension  of danger  to the body arises and it continues as long as  such apprehension of danger continues.  The High Court refused to attach  any  significance to the pellet-marks on  the  door- frame  as  it  thought  that "the gun  fire  which  hit  the chaukhat  was not the one which struck the  deceased".   But this  is  in  direct opposition to its  own  view  that  the respondents  had  loaded  only one cartridge  in  the  gun-a premise  from  which it had concluded that  the  respondents could  not  have  gone to the market with  an  evil  design. Ballistically, there was no reason to suppose that the  shot which killed the deceased was not the one which hit the door frame.   It is quite clear that the deceased was shot  after he  had left his gaddi and while he was about to enter  room No. 2 in order to save his life. It  would be possible to analyse the shooting incident  more minutely  but  it  is sufficient to  point  out  that  under section 105 of the Evidence Act, when a person is accused of any  offence,  the  burden  of  proving  the  existence   of circumstances  bringing the case within any of  the  General Exceptions in the Penal Code is upon him and the court shall presume  the absence of such circumstances.  The High  Court must,  of course, have been cognizant of this provision  but the Judgment does not reflect its awareness of the provision and  this we say not merely because section 105 as such  has not been referred to in its Judgment.  The importance of the matter under consideration is that sections 96 to 106 of the Penal  Code which confer and define the limits of the  right of  private defence constitute a general exception  to  the, offences  defined in the Code; in fact these sections are  a part of Chapter IV headed "General Exceptions".   Therefore, the  burden of proving the existence of circumstances  which would  bring  the case within the general exception  of  the right  of  private defence is upon the respondents  and  the court  must  presume the absence of such  circumstances  The burden which rests on the accused to prove that any of  the- general  exceptions  is  attracted  does  not  absolve   the prosecution  from discharging its initial burden and  truly, the  primary  burden  never  shifts  save  when  a   statute displaces   the  presumption  of  innocence;  "indeed,   the evidence,  though insufficient to establish  the  exception, may be sufficient to negative one or more of the ingredients of  the offence(1)".  That is to say an accused may fail  to establish affirmatively the existence of circumstances which would bring the case within a general exception and yet  the facts and circumstances proved by (1)  K.M.  Nanavati  vs.  State of Maharashtra;  [1962]  (1) Supp.  S.C.R. p. 567 a p. 598. 417 him  while discharging the burden under section 105  of  the Evidence Act may be enough to cast a reasonable doubt on the case of the prosecution, in which event he would be entitled to an acquittal.(1) The burden which rests on the accused to prove the exception is not of the same rigour as the  burden of  the prosecution to prove the charge beyond a  reasonable doubt.  It is enough for the accused to show, as in a  civil case, that the preponderance of probabilities is in favour of his plea.  (2) The  judgment  of one of us, Beg J., in Rishikesh  Singh  v. State(3)  explains  the  true  nature  and  effect  of   the

9

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 12  

different types of presumption sing under section 105 of the Evidence Act.  As stated in that judgment, while the initial presumption regarding the absence of circumstances  bringing the  case  within  an exception may be met  by  showing  the existence  of appropriate facts, the burden to  establish  a plea  of private defence by a balance of probabilities is  a more difficult burden to discharge.  The judgment points out that despite this position there may be cases where,  though the plea of private defence is not established by an accused on a balance of probabilities, yet the totality of facts and circumstances  may  still throw a reasonable  doubt  on  the existence  of  "mens rea", which normally  is  an  essential ingredient of an offence.  The present is not a case of this latter kind.  Indeed realising that a simple plea of private defence  may  be  insufficient  to  explain  the  nature  of injuries  caused to the deceased, Ram Swarup suggested  that the shot fired by him at the assailants of his father  Ganga Ram accidentally killed the deceased.  We have no doubt that the act of Ram Swarup was deliberate and not accidental.  The respondents led no evidence to prove their defence  but that  is not necessary because such proof can be offered  by relying on the evidence led by the prosecution, the material elicited  by cross-examining the prosecution  witnesses  and the totality of facts and circumstances emerging out of  the evidence  in  the  case.   In  view  of  the  considerations mentioned  earlier  we find it impossible to hold  that  Ram Swarup  fired the shot in defence of his father  Ganga  Ram. The circumstances of the case negative the existence of such a right. The  conclusion  of the High Court in regard to  Ram  Swarup being  plainly  unsupportable and leading as it  does  to  a manifest  failure  of  justice,  we  set  aside  the   order acquitting Ram Swarup and restore that of the Sessions Court convicting  him under section 302 of the Penal.  Code.   The possibility  of a scuffle, of course not enough to  justify, the killing of Munimji but bearing relevance on the sentence cannot,  however, be excluded and we would therefore  reduce the sentence of death imposed on Ram Swarup by the  Sessions Court  to  that of life imprisonment.  We also  confirm  the order  of conviction and sentence under section 25  (1)  (a) and  section  27  of the Arms Act and direct  that  all  the sentences shall run concurrently. (1)  Dahyabhai  Chhaganbhai Thakker vs.  State  of  Gujarat; [1964] 7 S.C.R. 361 (2)  Dahyabhai  Chhaganbhai Thakker vs.  State  of  Gujarat; Supra; Munshi Ram and Ors. vs.  Delhi Administration, A.I.R. 1968, S.C. 702. (3)  A.I.R. 1970 All. 51 418 In  regard  to  Ganga Ram, however, though  if  we  were  to consider his case independently for ourselves we might  have come  to  a conclusion different from the one to  which  the High Court has come, the principles governing appeals  under Article 136 of the Constitution would require of us to  stay our hands.  The incident happened within the twinkling of an eye  and  there is no compelling reason to differ  from  the concurrent finding of the High Court and the Sessions  Court that Ganga Ram never carried the gun and that at all  stages it  was  Ram  Swarup who had the gun.  The  finding  of  the Sessions  Court  that  "Ram Swarup must have  shot  at  the, deceased  at  the instigation of Ganga Ram" is based  on  no evidence  for none of the five eye-witnesses speaks  of  any such  instigation.  On the contrary, Shariat Ullah (P.W.  4) says that "As soon as they came, Ram Swarup opened the  gun- fire"  and  Shiva Dutta Mal (P.W. 5) says that  "Just  after

10

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 12  

coming  forward,  Ram  Swarup  opened  the  gun-fire".   The evidence  of the other three points in the  same  direction. True  that these witnesses have said that Ganga Ram and  Ram Swarup  challenged  with  one voice  the  authority  of  the deceased  but in discarding that part of the evidence we  do not  think  that the High Court has committed  any  palpable error requiring the interference of this Court.  Such  trite evidence of expostulations on the eve of an attack is  often spicy  and  tends to strain one’s credulity.   We  therefore confirm the order of the High Court acquitting Ganga Ram  of the  charge  under section 302 read with section 34  of  the Penal Code. The High Court was clearly justified in acquitting Ganga Ram of  the charge under section 307, Penal Code, in  regard  to the  knife-attack on Nanak Chand.  Nanak Chand  received  no injury at all and the story that the knife-blow missed Nanak Chand  but  caused  a  cut on  his  kurta  and  Bandi  seems incredible.  The High Court examined these clothes but found no  cut  marks thereon.  Tears there were on the  Kurta  and Bandi but it is their customary privilege to be torn.   With that,  the  conviction and sentence under the Arms  Act  for possession of the knife had to fall. There is no substance in the charge against Ganga Ram  under section 29 (b) of the Arms Act because he cannot be said  to have  delivered his licensed gun to Ram Swarup.  The  better view is that Ram Swarup took it. We,  therefore, confirm the order of acquittal in favour  of Ganga Ram on all the counts. This disposes of the appeal on merits. Mr.   Garg  had  raised  a  preliminary  objection  to   the maintainability of this appeal which, we thought, was devoid of  substance and could briefly be dealt with at the end  of the  judgment.  He argues that the State Government  has  no locus stand to file in this Court an appeal against an order of acquittal passed by the High Court because no such  right is  conferred  by the Code of Criminal Procedure or  by  the Constitution and there can be no right of appeal unless  one is clearly given by statute. 419 The  Code  of  Criminal Procedure does not  provide  for  an appeal  to this Court.  In Chapter XXXI ("of Appeals"),  the only  reference to an appeal to the Supreme Court is  to  be found  in section 426(2B) which empowers the High  Court  to suspend  the sentence and enlarge an accused on bail if  the Supreme  Court  has granted to him special leave  to  appeal against  any  sentence which the High Court has  imposed  or maintained.   But  by section 417(1) of the Code  the  State Government may, in any case, direct the Public Prosecutor to present  an  appeal to the High Court from  an  original  or appellate order of acquittal passed by. any court other than a  High Court.  It is in pursuance of this power that  State Governments file appeals in the High Court against orders of acquittal passed by courts subordinate to the High Court. Article  132(1) of the Constitution provides that an  appeal shall lie to the Supreme Court from any judgment, decree  or final order of a High Court, whether in a civil, criminal or other proceeding, if them High Court certifies that the case involves   a   substantial  question  of  law  as   to   the interpretation  of the Constitution.  Where the  High  Court has  refused to give such a certificate, the  Supreme  Court may  under clause (2) of Article 132 grant special leave  to appeal  if  it  is  satisfied  that  the  case  involves   a substantial question of law as to the interpretation of  the Constitution.  Where such a certificate is given or  special leave is granted, "any party in the case" may, under  clause

11

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 12  

(3)  of  the Article, appeal to the Supreme  Court  can  the ground  that any question of the aforesaid  description  has been  wrongly  decided and with the leave  of’  the  Supreme Court, on any other ground. Under  Article 134(1) of the Constitution an appeal lies  to the Supreme Court from any judgment, final order or sentence in  a criminal proceeding of a High Court if the High  Court (a)  has  in; appeal reversed any order of acquittal  of  an accused  person and has sentenced him to death; or  (b)  has withdrawn  for  trial before itself any case  from  a  court subordinate to it and has sentenced the accused to death; or (c)  certifies that the case is a fit one for appeal to  the Supreme  Court.   By Article 136(1) the  Supreme  Court  may notwithstanding anything contained in Chapter IV ("The Union Judiciary"), grant special leave in its discretion to appeal from any judgment, decree, determination, sentence or  order in  any  cause  or matter passed or made  by  any  court  or tribunal in India. Article  132(3) referred to above shows that where the  High Court  certifies  that  the  case  involves  a   substantial question of law as to the interpretation of the Constitution or  the Supreme Court grants special leave to appeal on  the ground that the case involves such a question, "any party in the  case"  may  appeal to the Supreme  Court.   It  is  in- controvertible that if the State Government is impleaded  to an appear in the High Court as a contending party, it  would be  a "party in the case" and therefore if the  decision  is adverse to it would be entitled to appeal on the  conditions mentioned in Article 132.  This right is of’ 420 course  limited to cases in which a substantial question  of law  as  to  the  interpretation  of  the  Constitution   is involved. Article 134(1) extracted above shows that if the High  Court reverses an order of acquittal and sentences the accused  to death,  he  can appeal to the Supreme Court as a  matter  of right.   A  similar right is available to an  accused  whose case  is  withdrawn for trial by the High Court and  who  on being  convicted is sentenced to death.  In a  case  falling under  Article  134(1)  (a), the  appeal  against  acquittal would  .normally  be filed in the High Court  by  the  State Government  under  section 417(1) of the  Code  of  Criminal Procedure.   It is only in cases instituted  upon  complaint that  the  complainant can ask for special leave  to  appeal from the order of acquittal.  If the State Government  files in  the High Court an appeal against an order  of  acquittal passed  by  the  lower court and if in such  an  appeal  the accused is sentenced to death, it seems to us patent that if the accused files an appeal in the Supreme Court against the judgment  of the High Court, the State ,Government would  be entitled to defend the appeal as a respondent interested  in the decision of the High Court.  In an appeal falling  under Article  134(1)  (b) also it is the State  Government  which would be interested in and entitled to defend the appeal  in the  Supreme Court.  The circumstance that Article 134  does not  refer to the right of the ’State Government  to  defend such  appeals  cannot be construed as depriving it  of  that right. If in an appeal against a conviction the High Court  acquits an  accused  or  if in an appeal  by  the  State  Government against  an order of acquittal the High Court  confirms  the order of acquittal, it is the State Government which, if  at all,  would  be aggrieved by the order of acquittal  and  it would  therefore  be entitled to challenge the  order  in  a further .appeal if any such appeal is provided by law.   The

12

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 12  

right  of  appeal is a creature of statute and  if  the  law provides for no further appeal the matter has to rest  where it  stands.  But if the Constitution provides for an  appeal against a judgment or order, the party aggrieved or affected by that judgment or order would be entitled to avail of  the right  or  facility  of appeal,  though  on  the  conditions prescribed by the Constitution. Under  Article 136(1) of the Constitution this Court  has  a wide  discretion,  though  sparingly  exercised,  to   grant special   leave  to  appeal  from  any   judgment,   decree, determination,  sentence  or  order.   This  remedy  can  be availed  of by any party which is affected adversely by  the ,decision  under  challenge.  If the State Government  is  a contesting  party to a matter disposed of by the High  Court and if it is aggrieved by the judgment or order of the  High Court,  it  is  entitled under Article  136(1)  to  ask  for special  leave of this Court to appeal from the decision  of the  High Court.  It is, of course, not entitled  to  obtain leave  but that is a separate matter because  under  Article 136(1)  no party is entitled to obtain leave as a matter  of right.   "The  Supreme Court may, in its  discretion,  grant special   leave   to  appeal"  and  one  of   the   relevant considerations  in  granting  leave  is  whether  the  party seeking 421 leave  is aggrieved by the impugned decision, in which  case it would, at any rate, have locus to ask for leave. The  locus  standi of State Governments to file  appeals  in this Court against judgments or orders rendered in  criminal matters,  particularly  those commenced  otherwise  than  on private  complaints, has been recognised over the years  and for  a valid reason.  All crimes raise problems of  law  and order and some raise issues of public disorder.  The  effect of crime on the ordered growth of society is deleterious and the State Governments are entrusted with the enforcement and execution of laws directed against prevention and punishment of crimes.  They have, therefore, a vital stake in  criminal matters  which  explains  why all  public  prosecutions  are initiated  in the name of the Government.  The objection  of Mr.  Garg that the State Government has no locus  standi  to file this appeal must be rejected. P. H. P.            Appeal dismissed. 422