18 April 2000
Supreme Court
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RAGHBIR SINGH Vs STATE OF HARYANA


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PETITIONER: RAGHBIR SINGH

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: STATE OF HARYANA

DATE OF JUDGMENT:       18/04/2000

BENCH: Ruma Pal, D.P. Wadhwa

JUDGMENT:

     RUMA PAL, J.

     This  appeal  has been preferred from the decision  of the  Punjab and Haryana High Court upholding the appellants conviction under Section 302 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC). The  appellant was found guilty by both the Trial Court  and the  High Court of having fatally shot one Arjun Singh.  The appellants challenge to this concurrent finding is two fold :   first  he  says  that the  eyewitness  account  of  his complicity  was not credible;  second, that even if one were to  accept the eye witness evidence of the event, he  could not  have been convicted under Section 302 IPC as the  death of  Arjun  Singh  was  in  fact  caused  by  renal  failure, septicemia  and respiratory failure.  In taking up the first plea,  it would be well to keep in mind that this Court will not  interfere with concurrent findings of fact unless there is  strong reason to do so, such as a manifest error of  law in  arriving at the finding or when the finding is  perverse in  the sense that any material fact has been overlooked  or is  based  on  any legally inadmissible evidence.   The  eye witnesses  in  this  case  were   Nasib  Singh  (PW  1)  the deceaseds  son, and Banarsi (PW 2), the deceaseds brother. Shorn of unnecessary details, both of them testified that on 26.4.91,  at  about  5.30 p.m., the appellant armed  with  a revolver  and his brother Kehar Singh, empty handed, came to the  outside of the house of Shiv Dutt in a lane in  village Sakra.   Kehar  Singh  raised lalkara  that  the  Sarpanch (Arjun  Singh)  should be shot and killed.   Thereupon,  the appellant  fired three shots at Arjun Singh.  The first shot hit  Arjun Singh on the right side of his chest, the  second hit him above the elbow of the left arm and the third on the left  wrist.   Both  PW 1 and PW 2 raised an  alarm.   Arjun Singh  collapsed.  Arjun Singh was removed by PW 1 and PW  2 to  the  Primary  Health Centre, Kaul.  The  doctor  of  the Centre  gave some treatment to Arjun Singh but advised  that he  should  be  removed to Kaithal General  Hospital.   Zile Singh  accompanied them from the Primary Health Centre, Kaul to  the General Hospital, Kaithal.  Arjun Singh was examined at  Kaithal  by  the  Doctor and was referred  to  the  Post Graduate  Institute (PGI), Chandigarh where Arjun Singh  was ultimately  admitted.   Both  PW  1   and  PW  2  then  left Chandigarh.   PW  1  returned  to his  village,  Sakra.   He reached  his village at 8.00 a.m on 27th April 1991.  He was on  his  way to Chandigarh via the Police Station  at  Dhand when  the  police  met him and he made a  statement  (Ex.PA)

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before  the police.  The police thereafter accompanied PW  1 to the scene of the shooting.  Arjun Singh expired on 1.5.91 in  PGI.   Banarasi (PW 2)s account of the incident of  the shooting  was  substantially  the same.  His  statement  was recorded  by  the police on 30th April 1991.  In  his  cross examination,  PW  2 stated that before the  shooting,  Arjun Singh  was  sitting in front of the house of Shiv Dutt  when the  appellant  fired the first shot from a distance of  six feet  and  then came forward by about one or two steps  when the  second shot was fired and the third shot was fired from about  a  distance of a ½ foot.         Both PW 1 and PW  2  stated that  the motive for the appellants killing Arjun Singh was because of a dispute over land which had resulted in a fight in which the appellant had received a gun shot injury in his abdomen.    In   the  criminal   case  instituted  in   this connection,  the appellant had alleged that he had been shot by  Arjun Singh.  The Trial Court found that PW 1 and PW  2 have  withstood the test of their lengthy cross  examination and nothing beneficial could come out to the defence.  There is no material discrepancy or improvement in their statement which  could go to the root of the case to dislodge the case of  the  prosecution. In the case before us, the  appellant took  a plea of alibi.  According to the appellant,  between 23.4.91  and  28.4.91, he was at Delhi along  with  Mukhtiar Singh  (DW 3) and stayed at the house of Bhim Singh (DW  2). The  evidence  of DW 3 was rejected by the Trial  Court  not only  on  the ground that he was an interested witness,  (as the appellant had supported him in the Assembly Election and because he was an accused in an incident regarding a dispute over  land  in  which PW 1 was the  complainant),  but  also because  DW  2 categorically denied that either DW 3 or  the appellant  were  known to him or had stayed with him.  DW  2 was  not declared hostile by the defence nor was the finding of  the Trial Court in this regard assailed by the appellant before  the High Court.  Apart from finding this consistency in  the evidence given by PW 1 and 2, the Trial Court  noted that  the  other oral and documentary and material  evidence corroborated  their  case.   Amongst the  material  evidence relied  on  was the fact that the bullet recovered from  the body  of  Arjun  Singh  was found by  the  Forensic  Science Laboratory  (FSL) to have been fired from the revolver  (Ex. PO)  of the appellant and not from any other fire arm.   The Trial Court accordingly found the guilt of the appellant and Kehar  Singh  established and convicted them  under  Section 302/34  IPC.   Both were sentenced to imprisonment for  life and  also  to pay a fine of Rs.2,000/- each.  The  appellant and  Kehar  Singh  appealed  before  the  High  Court.   The complainant,  PW 1 also filed a revision application seeking enhancement  of  the fine and compensation.  The High  Court acquitted  Kehar  Singh  holding that Kehar  Singh  was  not present at the scene of occurrence and that this finding was fortified  from  the  fact  that but for  ascribing  him  a lalkara  that  Arjun Singh should be killed, no  role  has been  attributed  to him.  The High Court was also  of  the view  that had Kehar Singh been at the scene of occurrence, he  would not have come empty handed. However, the evidence of  PW 1 and PW2 as to the presence of Raghbir Singh and his commission  of  the  crime was accepted after  an  elaborate discussion  of  the  evidence.  The High  Court  upheld  the appellants  conviction  and  also   allowed  the   revision application  filed  by  PW  1  by  enhancing  the  fine   to Rs.10,000/-  and  directing  the  same to  be  paid  to  the complainant.   In  default,  the  appellant  was  to  suffer rigorous  imprisonment  for one year.  The grounds on  which the  credibility  of  the eye witnesses account  have  been

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assailed before us are, (i) delay in informing the police by PW1;   (ii) the fact that the police did not find PW 1 or PW 2  when  they  went to Kaithal or Chandigarh and  (iii)  the non-mentioning  of the names of PW 1 and PW 2 by the doctors or  in  the  records  of the Primary  Health  Centre,  Kaul, General  Hospital,  Kaithal or the PGI,  Chandigarh.   These issues  were  specifically  considered by both  the  Courts. With  regard to the delay in filing the FIR, both the Courts have  found that there was no delay in filing the FIR.   The Trial  Court  found  that the rushing of the victim  to  the Hospital  to  save  his life instead of first going  to  the police  station was a satisfactory explanation for the delay in  making the complaint.  The view was affirmed by the High Court  and we find no reason to interfere with the same.  On the  second ground of challenge, the police at Kaithal  were first informed at 7.20 p.m.  on 26.4.91 when they received a ruqa  from  the General Hospital at Kaithal (PW 5).   They went  to Kaithal to see Arjun Singh at 8.00 p.m.   According to  PW 5, no relative of Arjun Singh had reached there.   SI Balbir  Singh, CIA staff of Police Station, Dhand said  that he  received  a wireless message from the police station  at Kaithal  at  7.30  p.m.   on 26.4.91 and  reached  the  PGI, Chandigarh  at  3.00 a.m.  on 27.4.91 when he found  no  one there  with  Arjun Singh except the attending doctor.  PW  1 and PW 2 both said that they left Kaithals General Hospital for  PGI, Chandigarh at 8.30 p.m.  on 26.4.91.  Before  that PW  1  was busy buying medicines etc.  and for hiring  taxi for  removal of my father to Chandigarh.  As far as PW 2 is concerned,  he said that after arriving at Kaithal  Hospital at  7.00  p.m.   he  remained   inside  the  laboratory  in connection  with arranging blood and I also gave my blood in the  laboratory  of  the  Civil  Hospital,  Kaithal.   Both witnesses  said that they arrived at the PGI, Chandigarh  at 11.30/11.45  p.m.   and  both  left  at  12.30  p.m.   after admitting Arjun Singh.  For the police not to have seen PW 1 and  PW  2 either at Kaul or Kaithal or at  PGI,  Chandigarh when  they arrived there, under these circumstances, is  not surprising.   On  the third ground, we find that  there  was sufficient evidence to show that Arjun Singh was accompanied by  some persons not only at Kaul but also at Kaithal and at the  PGI,  Chandigarh  and, as correctly held  by  the  High Court,  it  would be unreasonable to expect the  doctors  to name  the  persons  accompanying the patients.   Besides  to infer  the  absence  of  PW  1 and PW  2  at  the  scene  of occurrence  only  because  their names might not  have  been noted  by  the  doctors or in the medical registers  of  the places  to which the deceased was taken for treatment, calls for  an illogical inference which the High Court did not and indeed  could  not draw.  Similarly, no inference of PW  1s and  PW 2s absence from the scene of the crime can be drawn merely because the police officers did not see PW 1 and PW 2 when  they  went  to  Kaithal  and  Chandigarh.   The  first challenge  of the appellant regarding the credibility of the eye  witnesses account is, therefore, unsustainable and  is rejected.   The  claim  of the appellant that the  death  of Arjun  Singh  could have been caused for reasons other  than the  bullet injury is equally unsustainable.  The  appellant sought  to rely upon the evidence of Dr.  Sushil  Budhiraja, Senior  Resident,  PGI,  Chandigarh that Arjun Singh  was  a diabetic  and,  .  In this case blood had been  infected. There were four causes of the death in the present case i.e. renal  failure,  septicaemia, DIC and  respiratory  failure. ARF  is  an  abbreviation of acute renal  failure.   ATN  is abbreviation  of  acute tubular necrosis.  It  also  denotes acute  renal failure.  On re-examination, PW 17  clarified,

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The  complication  of renal failure, septicaemia,  DIC  and respiratory failure developed because of the injury received by  Arjun Singh and consequent operation. Furthermore,  the evidence  of Dr.  Dalbir Singh who conducted the  postmortem examination  of Arjun Singh(PW 4) was that four injuries had been  caused to the body of the deceased, of which  injuries Nos.   1,  3 and 5 could be caused by a fire arm.   He  also opined that  the cause of death was due to shock due to septicaemia  following  peritonitis due to injuries  to  the large  gut,  liver and intervening structures.  PW  4  also stated  that  the  bullet  wound  on  the  chest,  if   left untreated,  was  sufficient  to  have caused  death  in  the ordinary  course of nature.  The evidence thus clearly shows that  peritonitis,  renal  failure, septicaemia  etc.   were directly  relatable to the bullet injury.  The Trial Courts conclusion  that  the death was caused by a shot fired  from the  revolver  of  the  appellant is  in  keeping  with  the evidence on record.  Significantly, the plea does not appear to  have  been raised before the High Court at all.  In  our view,  the appellant has been unable to point out any  error of  law or any perversity which would justify this Court  in upsetting  the  concurrent  finding as to the guilt  of  the appellant  under Section 302 IPC.  However, the  enhancement of  the  fine  by  the High Court  from  Rs.2,000/-  to  Rs. 10,000/-  on the revision application of PW 1 is unsupported by any reason.  For the reasons stated above, we dismiss the appeal but set aside the enhancement of the fine and restore the  fine  of Rs.2,000/- as originally imposed by the  Trial Court.