05 March 2008
Supreme Court
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ANIMIREDDY VENKATA RAMANA Vs PUBLIC PROSECUTOR, H.C. OF A.P.

Bench: S.B. SINHA,HARJIT SINGH BEDI
Case number: Crl.A. No.-000917-000917 / 2006
Diary number: 21913 / 2006
Advocates: Y. RAJA GOPALA RAO Vs


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CASE NO.: Appeal (crl.)  917 of 2006

PETITIONER: Animireddy Venkata Ramana & Ors

RESPONDENT: Public Prosecutor, H.C. of A.P.

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 05/03/2008

BENCH: S.B. Sinha & Harjit Singh Bedi

JUDGMENT: J U D G M E N T

CRIMINAL APPEAL NO. 917 OF 2006

S.B. SINHA,  J :

1.      Appellants, nine in number, are before us aggrieved by and  dissatisfied with a judgment and order dated 6.07.2006 passed by a Division  Bench of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in Criminal Appeal No. 2600 of  2004, dismissing an appeal from a judgment of conviction and sentence  dated 9.11.2001 passed by VII Additional Sessions Judge in Sessions Case  No. 150 of 1999 holding the appellants guilty of commission of murder of  one Annamreddi Tatayya Naidu (deceased) and causing injuries to PW-1  Annamreddy Sreenivasa Rao, the son of the deceased.

2.      Enmity between the parties stands admitted.  All the accused, the  deceased and the prosecution witnesses are residents of a village commonly  known as K.O. Mallavaram.   

       The deceased, his two sons PWs 1 and 2 and PWs 5 to 7 were accused  in Sessions Case No. 193 of 1998.  A dispute between the two groups over  some land came upto this Court.  There were political differences also.   Accused No. 1 allegedly supported Accused No. 3 in the Gram Panchayat  elections wherein the deceased lost.  Another incident took place in relation  thereto.  A case was filed against the deceased and others.  It ended in  acquittal.  There was an incident of fire in the village.  Some of the accused  persons allegedly collected a huge amount promising the victims that they  would construct houses for those whose houses stood gutted therein but the  said promises were not kept.   

3.      PWs 1 and 2 as also the deceased and several other family members  went at Tuni to attend the court in which the case against the deceased and  others was pending.  Accused persons were also present in the court.  The  distance between Tuni and the village is said to be about 20 kms.   

       Whereas others returned, the deceased and his son PW-1 stayed back.   They came to the bus complex of Tuni at about 9.30 p.m. on 23.06.1998.   They boarded the bus for going to their village.  PW-5 also boarded the same  bus.  PWs 6 and 7 are said to have boarded the same bus from a bus stop  known as Tandava Centre.  Admittedly PW-3 Namala Chandra Rao and  PW-4 Yandamuru Prasada Rao were the conductor and driver of the said  bus.   

       While the bus reached Rapaka road junction at about 10.30 p.m.,  some passengers got down from the bus.  When it started again, Accused  No. 1 exhorted others to kill the deceased.  Appellants herein as also  Accused No. 10 (since deceased) inflicted a large number of injuries upon

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him.  His body was dragged near the door of the bus.  PW-1 was also  assaulted.  He was dragged by Accused Nos. 11 to 18 upto the door of the  bus.  The driver and the conductor as also other passengers fled away.   Accused also thereafter left the place of incident.  PW-1 cried for help.   Hearing his cry, PWs 3 and 4 came back to the bus and on a request made by  him, the bus was brought to the house of the deceased.   

4.      Before the learned Trial Judge a large number of witnesses were  examined.  Eye witnesses to the incident, however, were PWs 1, 5, 6 and 7.   Their testimonies were not relied upon by the learned Trial Judge.   

       Placing reliance on the testimonies of PW-3 that no passenger boarded  the bus from Tandava Centre, the statements of PWs 6 and 7 were  disbelieved.  As the learned Trial Judge disbelieved the testimonies of PWs  6 and 7 that they had boarded the bus from the said stop, the deposition of  PW-5 was also not relied upon.  Their testimonies were furthermore  disbelieved on the premise that they did not satisfactorily explain as to why  they had visited village Tuni on the fateful day.  Comments were also made  by the learned Trial Judge that no documentary evidence was produced  before the Court to establish their presence particularly in view of the  evidence of PW-4.  The learned Trial Judge also placed importance on the  dispute between the parties to arrive at a conclusion that they were interested  witnesses.

5.      The learned Sessions Judge also laid emphasis on the fact that  immediately after the occurrence the officer incharge of the police station as  also the officers of the Road Transport Corporation were informed, they  came in a bus to the village at about 1 a.m. and examined the witnesses.  The  deceased and PW-1 were shifted to the hospital at Tuni.  But the general  diary on the basis whereof the said information was said to have been  received by the investigating officer having not been produced, the First  Information Report was held to be hit by Section 162 of the Code of  Criminal Procedure (Code).   

       It was furthermore opined that as the lights of bus were switched off,  it was not possible for the prosecution witnesses and in particular PWs 5 to 7  to identify all the accused.  It was also opined that the weapons which were  purported to have been recovered at the instance of the accused being M.O.  Nos. 1 to 7 being not uniform in size and shape, their recovery at the  instance of the accused could not be relied upon.  Details of the said  weapons having not been furnished by the said eye-witnesses, an adverse  inference in that behalf was also raised.             So far as the deposition of PW-1 who was an injured witness is  concerned, the learned Sessions Judge disbelieved him inter alia holding:

"\005The accused all or any one of them were not  seen just prior to the time of occurrence anywhere  in Tuni Town or in the Bus stand till they were  alleged to have been seen in the bus\005"

6.      On the aforementioned findings, a judgment of acquittal was  recorded.  The State preferred an appeal thereagainst which has been  allowed in part by a Division Bench of the Andhra Pradesh High Court  holding the appellants as also Accused No. 10 guilty of commission of  murder of the deceased and acquitting Accused Nos. 11 to 24 of all charges.   

7.      Mr. M.N. Rao, learned Senior Counsel appearing on behalf of the  appellants, apart from reiterating the grounds which found favour with the  learned Sessions Judge in pronouncing the judgment of acquittal, submitted:

(i)     The High Court misdirected itself insofar as it failed to take into  consideration that while entertaining an appeal against a judgment  of acquittal the parameters therefor are different from one arising  out of a judgment of conviction and as in this case two views are

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reasonably possible, the impugned judgment is unsustainable in  law.   (ii)    Independent witnesses who were cited in the chargesheet being  CWs \026 11 and 12 having not been examined as regards the veracity  of the prosecution case, a doubt about the prosecution version  should have been raised by the High Court.   (iii)   Statements of PWs 5 to 7 having been found to be doubtful by the  learned Trial Judge, the High Court should not have relied upon  them. (iv)    Reliance placed by the High Court on the statements of PW-1 is  misplaced.  

8.      Mr. Anoop G. Choudhari, learned Senior Counsel appearing on behalf  of the State, on the other hand, submitted: (i)     The learned Trial Judge wrongly discarded the evidence of PWs 6  and 7 purporting to rely upon the evidence of PW-4 who had not  made any statement in his deposition that they did not board the  bus at Tandava Centre and as such the same is wholly perverse.   (ii)    PW-5 who admittedly boarded the bus at Tuni itself in any event  could not have been disbelieved only because PWs 6 and 7 were  disbelieved.   (iii)   None of the prosecution witnesses having been put any question in  regard to their purpose of the visit, the learned Sessions Judge  misdirected itself in disbelieving their evidence on the ground that  they failed to prove their presence and / or purpose of their visit to  Tuni. (iv)    There was no reason to disbelieve PW-1 who was an injured  witness. (v)     The question as to whether the lights were switched off or not was  wholly immaterial as not only all the accused were known to the  prosecution witnesses, but also in view of the admitted fact that the  light near the conductor seat was on and the accused were sitting  behind the deceased and PW-1. (vi)    Testimony of PW-3, who for reasons best known to him, having  resiled from his earlier statement, could not have been preferred to  that of PWs 5 to 7 as the evidence of all the three prosecution  witnesses are consistent.   

9.      Certain basic facts are not denied or disputed.  The deceased died in  the bus at about 10.30 p.m. on 23.06.1998 while traveling to his village  home from Tuni.  PW-1 also sustained injuries in the said incident.   Immediately after the incident, hearing cries from passengers, the driver of  the bus stopped the bus.  Not only the accused persons fled away, all others  also did including PWs 3 and 4.  They came back after a short while hearing  the cries of PW-1.  They acceded to his request to take the bus to his house.   From the records, it appears that the distance between the place where the  accident took place and the village in question was not much.  In any event,  the destination of the bus was the said village and they were bound to take  the bus thereat.  PW-1 informed about the incident to PW-2, another son of  the deceased.   

10.     The dead body of the deceased was brought down from the bus and  taken to the house.  The conductor of the bus sent an information to the  Depot Manager of the State Road Transport Corporation at Tuni.  The  investigating officer was also informed.  A report to that effect might have  been noted in the general diary but the same could not have been treated to  be an FIR.  When an information is received by an officer incharge of a  police station, he in terms of the provisions of the Code was expected to  reach the place of occurrence as early as possible.  It was not necessary for  him to take that step only on the basis of a First Information Report.  An  information received in regard to commission of a cognizable offence is not  required to be preceded by a First Information Report.  Duty of the State to  protect the life of an injured as also an endeavour on the part of the  responsible police officer to reach the place of occurrence in a situation of  this nature is his implicit duty and responsibility.  If some incident had taken

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place in a bus, the officers of the Road Transport Corporation also could not  ignore the same.  They reached the place of occurrence in another bus at  about 1 a.m.  The deceased and the injured were, only then, shifted to the  Tuni hospital.   

11.     A First Information Report was recorded at about 3 O’Clock in the  night.  In the aforementioned situation, it cannot be said that the information  received by the investigating officer on the telephone was of such a nature  and contained such details which would amount to a First Information  Report so as to attract the provisions of Section 162 of the Code.

12.     In the First Information Report all the accused persons were named  and overt acts on their part were also stated at some length.  Each and every  detail of the incident was not necessary to be stated.  A First Information  Report is not meant to be encyclopedic.  While considering the effect of  some omissions in the First Information Report on the part of the informant,  a court cannot fail to take into consideration the probable physical and  mental condition of the first informant.  One of the important factors which  may weigh with the court is as to whether there was a possibility of false  implication of the appellants.  Only with a view to test the veracity of the  correctness of the contents of the report, the court applies certain well- known principles of caution.   

13.     Once, however, a First Information Report is found to be truthful,  only because names of some accused persons have been mentioned, against  whom the prosecution was not able to establish its case, the entire  prosecution case would not be thrown away only on the basis thereof.  If  furthermore the purported entry in the general diary, which had not been  produced, is not treated to be a First Information Report, only because some  enquiries have been made, the same by itself would not vitiate the entire  trial.  Enquiries are required to be made for several reasons; one of them is  to ascertain the truth or otherwise of the incident and the second to  apprehend the accused persons.  Arrest of accused persons, as expeditiously  as possible, leads to a better investigation.  Accused No. 1 was a Sarpanch of  the village.  Accused No. 2 is a Fair Price Shop dealer.  Accused No. 3 was  also admittedly a well-known person.  It is also not denied and disputed that  other accused were also related to him.   

       In view of the fact that such an incident had taken place, indisputably  it would immediately be known to the villagers.  Those who hold some  respectable position in the village and particularly those who are concerned  with the administration of Panchayat were expected to be present.   

14.     PW\02717 P. Ramchandra Rao was the investigating officer at the first  instance.  PW-18 S. Surya Rao investigated the case after PW-17 was  transferred.  From their testimonies it appears that Accused Nos. 4, 7, 9, 15,  21 and 23 were arrested on 7.07.1998 in the morning from near about a  place known as Narappa Tank situated near Tuni.  Accused No. 12 was  arrested on 14.07.1998 and Accused Nos. 14, 16, 18 and 20 were also  arrested on the same day.  An injury on the finger of Accused No. 5 was also  noticed.  He was sent to the government hospital for treatment.  Accused  Nos. 6, 8, 11, 10 and 24 were arrested in the house of Accused No. 11 on  16.07.1998 in the morning hours.  They made confessions leading to  recovery of facts which are admissible under Section 27 of the Indian  Evidence Act.  Some of them, viz., Accused Nos. 6, 8, 10 and 24 also  produced blood stained clothes which had been put on by them.

15.     We have taken note of the absence of the accused and that they were  absconding for a long time only to highlight the conduct on their part and  that had they been really innocent and falsely implicated, their presence  would have been noticed in the village on the same night and in fact they  could have been witnesses to inquest etc.   

16.     Conduct of the accused vis-‘-vis the statement of an eye-witness has  been considered by this Court in Dharmendrasinh Alias Mansing Ratansinh

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v. State of Gujarat [(2002) 4 SCC 679] in the following terms:

"16. The submission made on behalf of the  appellant that the complainant had actually not  witnessed the occurrence also has no basis. She  has made the statement to that effect and nothing  could be elicited in her cross-examination by  reason of which any doubt could arise about the  veracity of her statement. On return from the dairy,  she found her husband assaulting the deceased and  on her alarm raised, he slipped away from the  other door. It is also strange that after the incident  the appellant was not available for more than 15  days until he was arrested by the police. In the  normal course, on the murder of his two sons, he  should have been moving around the scene and to  have lodged the report against the real assailants or  in case the real assailants were not known, he  could have lodged the report without naming any  accused therein\005"  

17.     Statements under Section 161 of the Code were recorded by PW-17 P.  Ramchandra Rao.  Accused Nos. 19 and 22 surrendered before PW-18 S.  Surya Rao on 21.07.1998 and Accused Nos. 13 and 17 surrendered before  him at 10 a.m. on 6.08.1998.

18.     The Mediator’s report, inquest report and the observation report all  are dated 24.06.1998.  The submission that the investigating officer recorded  the statements of the witnesses are not borne out from the records except  from an endorsement made in the sheet meant for noting the details of the  fare received by the conductor which is to the following effect:

"To The D.M. Sir, 07.30 KM Service, the bus started at 21.45 hours  from Tuni and it reached Repaka Centre, some  passengers poked among themselves in the bus.  In  that anxiety, the remaining passengers requested us  to stop the bus, got down and ran away.  We were  also got down from the bus with fear.  After some  time when we have seen in the bus two passengers  received serious injuries with knives.  One of them  requested us to take them to their house for first  aid.  We have informed the Depot Manager (DM)  and he brought one bus to the village.  C1, DSP  came and recorded the statements.  In the  afternoon at 15.00 we have reached the depot.   Hence we are informing you."                  The learned Trial Judge, in our opinion, committed a serious error in  opining that investigation had already started before the lodging of the First  Information Report.

19.     PW-3 in his evidence did not say when the said endorsement was  made.  He did not say that investigating officer came to the village and took  his statement.  According to him, one DSP came and recorded the said  statement.

20.     Statements of PWs 3 and 4 cannot be taken to be sacrosanct for the  purpose of disbelieving other witnesses.  The statements of PW-3 evidently  were recorded on the next day after he reached the depot at about 3 p.m.   Even then he did not say that one of the passengers had died.  No undue  importance can be given to a sentence made therein so as to lead a  conclusion that the entire prosecution case is vitiated in law.  

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21.     The distance between Tuni, where the hospital and the police station  are situate, and the village has been noticed by us.  It is about 20 kms.  The  distance between the village and the place of occurrence is about 2 kms.   The First Information Report was lodged at about 3 a.m. on the same night.    Inquest started at 7 a.m. next day.  It took about three hours.  Observation  report was drafted at about 6 a.m.  The Mediator’s Report was drawn up  immediately thereafter.   

22.     Submission of Mr. Rao that the Village Administrative Officer was  not informed by PW-1 loses all significance as he is a party to the  aforementioned reports.  The place of occurrence was an isolated place.   There was no house or shed.  There was a land bearing ’Gingelly Crop’.   There were bushes on both sides of the road.

23.     Post mortem was conducted by PW-11 Dr.B.V.S. Chalapati Rao.  It  commenced at about 2 p.m.  As many as 30 injuries were found on the body  of the deceased.  Only Injury Nos. 1 to 3 were possible to have been caused  by a stick.  Apart from the said question, no other question worth any  significance has been put to the said witness (PW-11) on behalf of the  accused.  It is significant to note that according to the accused themselves  some of the weapons  (MOs 1 to 7) which had been shown to him had one  side sharp and one side blunt edges.   

24.     PW-10 Dr. K. Indira Surya Kumari had examined PW-1 and found a  large number of incised injuries but also found seven lacerated wounds on  his person.  She stated:

"The injuries 2, 3, 5 and 9 are caused by a sharp  object and the injuries 1,6,7,10 and 11 are caused  by blunt object about 4 to 8 hours prior to the  examination."

       In cross-examination, according to her, she was informed about the  nature of weapons causing injuries to PW-1.

25.     The injuries on the person of PW-1 might have been found to be  simple.  But, he with the dead body of his father came to the house.   The  mental condition of PWs 1 and 2 can be well imagined.  When the Depot  Manager and the Deputy Superintendent of Police arrived in a bus at about 1  a.m., as noticed hereinbefore, they must have made preliminary inquiries.   They were taken by another bus which was driven by PW-12 Bafti.  He was  also a witness to the spot inspection.

26.     Village Administrative Officer of K.O. Mallavaram was a witness to  the inquest as also the recovery.  Recovery of a large number of weapons as  also blood stained clothes is also not in dispute.  PW-14 D. Phani Babu is  the Village Administrative Officer of Nandivompu Village.  He is a witness  to the arrest of some of the accused.

27.     The learned Sessions Judge, as noticed hereinbefore, relied upon the  evidence of PW-3 (wrongly stated as PW-4) to discredit the evidence of  PWs 6 and 7 inter alia on the premise that they are interested witnesses.   There were some independent witnesses.  They, for obvious reasons, came  forward to depose in favour of the prosecution.  The High Court has rightly  noticed that PWs 3 and 4 tried to save their own skin.  They never informed  about the particulars of the incident.  They only stated that there had been  commotion.  They did not disclose any details about the incident.  On the  aforementioned premise the High Court had observed that they might have  been desisted from giving the particulars expecting that there may be a  trouble to them if the names of the accused are disclosed.  Their behaviour,  keeping in view the present societal condition, cannot be said to be wholly  unnatural.  They purported to have made a statement that Accused No. 1 did  not board the bus.  Although they knew who the accused were but never  made any statement before the police that he did not board the bus.  It was

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accepted that there were about 48 passengers in the bus and only one  passenger got down at the 4th stage.  They did not dispute that Tandava  Centre was a bus stop.  PW-3 could have proved from the chart that nobody  boarded the bus at that stage.  We find that except payment of fare for two  stages, fare have been paid for all the stages.  He could have correlated the  number of stages which would have been attracted if PWs 6 and 7 were to  board the bus at Tandava Centre.

28.     PWs 6 and 7 could not have been disbelieved only on that account.   The learned Sessions Judge took somewhat a strange view as regards the  purpose for which PWs 6 and 7 visited Tuni.  No question as to whether  PW-6 came to Tuni to purchase medicine for his mother or when she had  been brought back from Cancer Hospital, Kakinada was put to him.   Ordinarily, no witness would carry any documentary proof to show that he  had purchased medicine at Tuni.  No witness would keep the bus ticket with  himself to prove the fact that he travelled in the bus a few years back.  They  had witnessed a gruesome murder in the night ran about 2 kms. to inform  PW-2 about the occurrence.  If their testimonies otherwise are acceptable,  we are of the view that the same should not have been discarded on such  filmsy pretext.  PW-5 was already in the bus.  He did not board at Tandava  Centre.  Why his evidence had not been accepted is not decipherable from  the judgment of the learned Sessions Judge.  Reporting of the matter to the  Village Administrative Officer, in our opinion, was not of much  significance.  The Village Administrative Officer has been examined in this  case.  No suggestion was put to him that he was not aware of the incident.   Even otherwise he was involved in the investigation from 6 O’Clock in the  morning.  Even in the inquest report, the commission of the offence was  attributed to the accused, to which he was a signatory.   

29.     PW-2 in his evidence categorically stated that PWs 6 and 7 came to  his house at about 11 O’Clock in the night and informed him about the  incident and some time thereafter the dead body of the deceased as also PW- 1 arrived in the bus in question.  He not only found the dead body of his  father, but also found PW-1 lying in the bus in between two rows of seats  with bleeding injuries.  An attempt was made to take him to the hospital.  He  was placed in a tractor.  However, the driver was not available.   

       In the meanwhile only, the driver and the conductor of the bus  informed him that another bus would be coming from Tuni Depot.  PW-1  was taken to the hospital only in the said bus leaving the dead body in the  house.  Strangely enough, apart from throwing a suggestion that PWs 6 and  7 did not inform him about the incident, no other question was put to him to  test the veracity of his aforementioned statement.  The events which took  place immediately after the occurrence, therefore, find corroboration.  We do  not find any tinge of falsehood in his statement.  The sequence of events,  which we have noticed hereinbefore, also corroborates the prosecution case  in material particulars.  What, however, is significant is that PW-1 was not  believed at all.  PW-1 was an injured witness.  He may be an interested  witness.  But then, there was no reason as to why he would falsely implicate  the appellants.  Both he and PW-2 disclose the motive on the part of the  accused to commit the offence.  Enmity, as is well-known, is a double edged  weapon.  It is too much to expect of a person to notice as to which weapon  would be carried by which accused.  No accused would openly display them.   The observations of the learned Sessions Judge, therefore, that the accused  were not seen prior to the occurrence anywhere in the Tuni town or the bus  stand till they were alleged to have been seen in the bus, are perverse.  It  cannot be a ground for discrediting their otherwise truthful witness.  The  learned Trial Judge accepted in one part of the judgment that an injured  witness should be given credit but in the next sentence he stated:

"But in this case his evidence does not inspire  confidence."         No specific reason has been assigned in respect of the said statement.

30.     A court in the process of its job of appreciation of evidence may rely

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on a statement of a witness or may not.  It may even accept the evidence of a  witness in part.  But without taking recourse to the right methodology of  appreciation of evidence, no court of law should jump to the conclusion that  a prosecution witness is wholly untrustworthy only because his evidence has  not been corroborated by other witnesses.     

31.     The learned Judge found that both ocular as also circumstantial  evidence did not corroborate the testimony of PW-1.  Why he said so has not  been stated.  To what extent, the medical evidence is in variance with the  ocular evidence has also not been discussed.   

32.     Lacerated wounds were not only caused by assault with sticks but also  when a person falls down on a hard surface.  PW-1 was found in an injured  condition in between two rows of seats.  He was dragged like his father.   

33.     We may, however, notice that in his statement before PW-10 Dr. K.  Indira Surya Kumari has stated that he had been assaulted with stick and  other sharp cutting weapons.  Even if this part of the evidence is ignored,  still then there are enough explanations available on record to suggest as to  how lacerated wound could have been caused to him.   

34.     The learned Sessions Judge opined that the bus might not have been  stopped near the place of occurrence.  Why, how and where an offence is  committed cannot be a subject matter of guess.  The fact that the accused  persons had a motive also stands unrebutted.  It is not the case of the accused  that the matter relating to the Sessions Case in which the deceased and other  relatives were facing trial was not fixed in the court of Tuni on that day.  The  date admittedly was fixed for commitment of the trial to a Court of Sessions.   For one reason or the other it was adjourned.  If taking advantage of the said  situation as also in view of the fact that they were travelling in the same bus  and the bus was passing through a lonely place, Accused No. 1 gave  exhortation to kill the deceased resulting in the death of the deceased and  sufferance of injuries by PW-1, it cannot be said to be absurd on the face of  it.  The question posed as to why the accused had chosen the said occasion is  not for a court of law to answer.  A sweeping statement has been made by  the learned Sessions Judge that presence of prosecution witnesses in the bus  is highly doubtful.  It was not to be readily inferred.  The learned Sessions  Judge found:

"\005The presence of PWs in the bus is highly  doubtful.  The overt acts attributed to particular  accused causing particular injuries to the deceased  and PW1 is discrepant from one witness to other.   The medical evidence is in variance with the  evidence of PW 1, 5, 6 and 7 as to the nature of the  injuries and also as to the nature of the weapons  used for causing injuries to PW1 and the deceased.   The evidence as to the arrest and seizure of  material objects is arbitrary.  None of the witnesses  have stated that there was sufficient light for them  to witness the occurrence.  It is only in court for  the first time an attempt to prove that there was  light is made by PWs 1, 5, 7 but that was also  falsified by the evidence of PWs 3 and 4.  At any  rate it is doubtful.  None of the witnesses amongst  PWs 5, 6 and 7 thought of giving report to VAO  who is residing just opposite to the house of PW.1.   Above all, the evidence of PWs 3 and 4 and also  the circumstances admit that a report was recorded  from PW1 earlier than Ex. P.2 but that is not  produced.  The general diary sought for by the  accused has not been produced.  The explanation  for non-production of the same is not  convincing\005"  

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35.     We have not seen much discussions on the part of the learned Judge in  his judgment to discredit the arrest of the accused persons and seizure of  material objects.  Why such evidence was termed arbitrary is beyond any  comprehension.   

So far as sufficiency of the light for identification of the witnesses to  identify the accused is concerned, suffice it to say that they belonged to the  same village.  They have been fighting litigations for years.  It is too much to  say that even in that situation the identity of the accused persons would not  be known to the prosecution witnesses.  All the passengers were sitting in  their respective seats for a long time.  They boarded the bus at the same  place.  Their destinations were same.  The High Court, in our opinion, has  rightly noticed that as the deceased and the accused persons were sitting just  behind the seat of the conductor where a light was on, it was possible for the  prosecution witnesses to identify the accused persons committing the  offence.

36.     Non-production of the general diary by itself cannot be a ground for  disbelieving the entire prosecution case particularly when apart from a  solitary statement made by PW-3 in his note, no other evidence has been  brought on records to show that statement of any witness had been recorded  under Section 161 of the Code.  It will bear repetition to state that apart from  recording the statements by the investigating officers, viz., PWs 16, 17 and  18 who had no role to play in the matter of lodging the First Information  Report.  Some statements were recorded by the Deputy Superintendent of  Police.   

37.    In Dharmendrasinh Alias Mansing Ratansinh (supra), this Court  opined that when the evidence of a witness is found to be natural, the same  should be believed.   

38.     In the aforementioned situation, the High Court, in our view, rightly  recorded:

"35. When attack is made by several persons  simultaneously, it is impossible for any person to  say the particulars regarding the nature of  weapon, which person was attacked by the  accused and which part of the body they caused  injuries.  The witnesses tried their best to  describe the specific overt acts and the places,  parts of the body on which the injuries were  caused and the nature of weapons used.  Simply  because the witnesses failed to give parrot-like  version describing everything in a minute manner  the argument that the evidence cannot be  believed is a far fetched argument and on the  pretext of not giving those details by the  witnesses though observed the attack cannot be  thrown out and due weight has to be given to the  evidence of witnesses, if their evidence is truthful  and acceptable.  Therefore, the trial court went  by giving the reasons beyond the imagination of  the witnesses, arrived at its own conclusions with  a view to give the benefit of doubt to the accused.   Simply because PW-1 is also an accused in the  other case, his presence cannot be disputed and  when he received injuries in the incident, his  evidence is brushed aside on the ground that his  evidence did not corroborate the evidence of  PWs 5 to 7.  Simply because there was enmity  between the accused and the prosecution party, it  cannot be said that an injured witness is also  speaking all the lies.  The truthfulness of the  version given by such witnesses can be verified

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from the other circumstances whether their  version is truthful and acceptable in the  circumstances placed by the prosecution.  It  cannot be brushed aside automatically simply on  the ground that he is inimical to the accused.  The  accused are known persons and the prosecution  witnesses and the accused belonging to the same  village.  Therefore, it is not impossible to the  witnesses to identify the accused with little light.   The trial Court admitted that usually there will be  lights in the bus, but as PWs 3 and 4 said that  there was no light at the time of occurrence, their  version has been accepted.  PWs 3 and 4 did not  completely mention the particulars of the  incident except saying that when there was a  commotion they got down from the bus and after  the incident they got into the bus.  They were not  inclined to give the particulars regarding the  weapons held by the accused, the number of  persons got down from the bus, the nature of  injuries received by the deceased and PW-1,  whether the accused ran away after the incident  etc.  Therefore, PWs 3 and 4 did not  wholeheartedly come forward to give the  complete version.  They might have been  desisted from giving the particulars by expecting  that there may be a trouble to them if the names  of the accused are given.  They did not mention  any special reason as to how A-1 to A-3 were  only remembered and other accused could not be  remembered when they were regularly going to  the village and taking passengers from the  village.  Therefore, the trial Court accepting the  evidence of PWs 3 and 4 and rejecting the  evidence of PWs 1, 5, 6 and 7 is not appreciable  and it is only to acquit the accused."

39.     We do not see any reason to take any exception to the said findings of  the High Court.   

40.     Although not argued but we may also take note of the fact that  according to PW-1, he was assaulted and dragged by Accused Nos. 11 to 24.   They have been acquitted.  That may lead us to the conclusion that one part  of the story implicating the appellants herein in the matter of assault to him  is not exceptionable but then the accused formed a common intention/  common object at the spot.  Such a large number of injuries both on the  deceased as also PW-1 were not possible to be caused only by a handful of  persons.  It must have taken place within a few minutes.  The entire incident  was described by PWs 3 and 4 only.  It was only when all the passengers  fled away, they also fled away.  They even did not notice the dead body or  PW-1 in an injured condition.

41.     Furthermore, it is a well-settled principle of law that the maxim falsus  in uno, falsus in omnibus is not applicable in India.  If the High court has  given benefit of doubt to Accused Nos. 11 to 24, the same by itself may not  be sufficient to extend the same benefit to the main accused who took part in  a brutal murder of their arch enemy.   

42.     There cannot be any dispute in regard to the legal proposition that an  appellate court while entertaining an appeal from a judgment of acquittal  would not ordinarily interfere therewith, if two views are possible.  In our  attempt to analyse the judgment of the learned Trial Judge, we have noticed  very serious infirmities therein both in regard to the legal propositions as  also appreciation of evidence.  Non-consideration of material facts and  consideration of irrelevant facts would be factors which would invite an

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interference with the judgment of acquittal.   

       This Court recently in Mahadeo Laxman Sarane & Anr. v. State of  Maharashtra [2007 (7) SCALE 137] held: "18. We have heard counsel for the parties at  length. We are conscious of the settled legal  position that in an appeal against acquittal the High  Court ought not to interfere with the order of  acquittal if on the basis of the some evidence two  views are reasonably possible - one in favour of  the accused and the other against him. In such a  case if the Trial Court takes a view in favour of the  accused, the High Court ought not to interfere with  the order of acquittal. However, if the judgment of  acquittal is perverse or highly unreasonable or the  Trial Court records a finding of acquittal on the  basis of irrelevant or inadmissible evidence, the  High Court, if it reaches a conclusion that on the  evidence on record it is not reasonably possible to  take another view, it may be justified in setting  aside the order of acquittal. We are of the view that  in this case the High Court was justified in setting  aside the order of acquittal."

       In Swami Prasad v. State of Madhya Pradesh [2007 (4) SCALE 181],  this Court opined: "15. However, it is equally true that the High  Court while entertaining an appeal against a  judgment of acquittal would be entitled to consider  the entire materials on records for the purpose of  analyzing the evidence. There is a presumption  that an accused is innocent, unless proved  otherwise. When he is acquitted, the said  presumption, becomes stronger. But it may not be  correct to contend that despite overwhelming  evidence available on records, the appellate court  would not interfere with a judgment of acquittal.  {See Chandrappa and Ors. v. State of Karnataka  2007 (3) SCALE 90.}"

43.     Which matter, therefore, deserves interference at the hands of the  appellate court would depend upon the fact situation of each case.  Legal  proposition must be applied having regard to the fact of each case.   

44.     For the reasons aforementioned, there is no merit in this appeal which  is dismissed accordingly.