24 November 1978
Supreme Court
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SALIM ZIA Vs STATE OF U.P.

Bench: SINGH,JASWANT
Case number: Appeal Criminal 213 of 1977


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PETITIONER: SALIM ZIA

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: STATE OF U.P.

DATE OF JUDGMENT24/11/1978

BENCH: SINGH, JASWANT BENCH: SINGH, JASWANT REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)

CITATION:  1979 AIR  391            1979 SCR  (2) 394  1979 SCC  (2) 648

ACT:      Supreme  Court   (Enlargement  of   Criminal  Appellate Jurisdiction) Act,  1970,. Sec.  2(a) &  Indian Penal  Code, 1860 (Act  45 of  1860),  Sec.  302-Accused  firing  at  the deceased resulting  in instant  death-Accused claiming right of private  defence of  person, property-Onus  15 on accused may be  discharged ’by  establishing a mere preponderance of probabilities either in the cross-examination of prosecution witnesses or by adducing defence evidence.      Appeal  against.   acquittal-Reversing  the   order  of acquittal Principles, criteria and guidelines.

HEADNOTE:      The appellant’s  father one  Jaffar Ali  leased out  an acre of  paddy growing land to the deceased. The prosecution alleged that while the deceased was harvesting the crop, the appellant and  his brothers  went to  the field armed with a gun. There  had Been  some exchange  of  words  between  the appellant and  the deceased  as regards  the  share  of  the produce  as   agreed  to   between  the   deceased  and  the appellant’s father. The appellant was alleged to have fired. at the deceased killing him on the spot.      Accepting the appellant’s version contained in a report stated to  have been lodged by him at the police station ten minutes before  the First Information Report was lodged, the Sessions Judge  acquitted the  appellant. The  report stated that on  the day of the occurrence the deceased was stealing paddy bags from the appellant’s field and on seeing him (the appellant) the  deceased fired from a revolver which hit the appellant on  the right  thigh and  that  finding  that  the deceased was  determined to kill him the appellant fired two or three rounds with his gun which hit the deceased.      On appeal  by the  State, the  High Court set aside the acquittal of  the appellant  and convicted and sentenced him to imprisonment for life.      On Further  appeal to  this Court under s. 2 (a) of the Supreme   Court    (Enlargement   of    Criminal   Appellate Jurisdiction) Act,  1970 it  was contended  on behalf of the appellant that  the  High  Court  had  acted  with  material irregularity in  ignoring the  guidelines laid  down by this Court for  interfering  ’with  the  judgment  and  order  of acquittal and  convicting the appellant without referring to

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the conclusions  correctly arrived  at by the Sessions Judge and secondly  the appellant  was fully  justified in opening fire in exercise of the right of private defence.      Dismissing the appeal, ^      HELD: 1  (a) The  High Court  was  fully  justified  in reversing the  order of acquittal of the appellant which was erroneously made  by the  Sessions Judge  on  the  basis  of surmises, and conjectures and in convicting him specially 395 when the  prosecution story  that the appellant fired at the deceased  without      any   justifiable   provocation   was established to  the hilt  by the  evidence of  a  number  of prosecution witnesses  who even  according to  the  Sessions Judge gave a true account of the occurrence. [404D]      (b) The  legal position  emerging from  a long  line of decisions starting with Sheo Swarup v. king Emperor. 61 I.A. 398 is:      "The High  Court in  an  appeal  against  an  order  of      acquittal  under   s.  417  of  the  Code  of  Criminal      Procedure, 1898  has full power to review at large, the      evidence on  which the  order of  acquittal was founded      and to reach the conclusion that upon the evidence, the      order of  acquittal should be reversed." [403B-D]      2. The  different pharaseology used in the judgments of this Court  such as  (a) substantial and compelling reasons; (b)  good   and  sufficiently  cogent  reasons;  (c)  strong reasons; are not intended to curtail or place any limitation on the  undoubted power  of an  appellate court in an appeal against acquittal  to review the entire evidence and to come to its  own conclusion  as stated  above but  in doing so it should give  proper consideration to such matters as (i) the views of  the trial  judge as  to  the  credibility  of  the witnesses (ii) the presumption of innocence in favour of the accused, a  presumption certainly  not weakened  by the fact that he  had been acquitted at his trial, (iii) the right of the accused  to the benefit of any real and reasonable doubt and (iv) the slowness of an appellate court in disturbing la finding of fact arrived at by a judge who had the advantage, of seeing the witnesses. [403E-404A]      Nur Mohammad  v. Emperor. AIR 1945 PC 151; Sanwat Singh      v. State  of Rajasthan,  [1961] 3  SCR 120, Ramaphupala      Reddy &  Ors. v.  State of A.P., [1970] 3 SCC 474; Gopi      Nath Ganga  Ram  Ram  Surve  &  Ors.  v.  State  of  11      Maharashtra, [1970]  3 SCC  627; Dharam  Das &  Ors. v.      State of  U.P., [1973]  2 SCC 216: Lekha Yadav v. State      of Bihar,  [1973] 2  SCC 424:  Samson   Hyam Kemkar  v.      State of Maharashtra, [1974] 3 SCC 494; Barati v. State      of U.P., [1971] 4 SCC 258; referred to.      (c) In the present case it cannot be said that the High Court has  lost sight  of the  principles laid  down by this Court  with  regard  to  the  disposal  of  appeals  against acquittal. [404A]      2.(a) on  the basis of expert medical evidence the High Court come to the conclusion that the injuries on the person of the  appellant were  not gun shot  injuries and could not be caused  with a  revolver but were fabricated to look like gun shot wounds for the purpose of creating a defence. [400]      (b) The  burden on the accused to establish the plea of self-defence is  not as onerous as the one which lies on the prosecution. It  is the  prosecution which  is  required  to prove its  case beyond reasonable doubt and the accused need not establish  the plea  to the  hilt and  may discharge his onus by  establishing a  mere preponderance  of  probability either by  laying basis  for that  plea in cross-examination

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of prosecution  witnesses or  by adducing  defence  evidence [401H-402B] 396      In the  instant case,  however the  appellant  has  not discharged  that  burden  either  by  adducing  any  defence evidence or  by eliciting from the prosecution witnesses the existence  of   facts  and   circumstances  satisfying   the requisite test of preponderance of probability entitling him to exercise the right of private defence either of person or property. [402C]           Pratap v.  State of  U.P., AIR 1976 SC 966. Munshi      Ram &  Ors. v.  Delhi Administration, [1968] 2 SCR 455;      referred to.      (c) The  appellant has  not been able to establish that the paddy  field belonged  to him  or that  it had  not been leased out  by him to the deceased on ’Ahdhiya ghalla batai’ basis or  that the  deceased committed theft or attempted to commit theft  of paddy,  to which  he i.e. the appellant was lawfully entitled. [402D]      (d) The  appellant has also not established that it was the deceased who fired any shot at him from the revolver and it was only in self-defence that he fired the shots from the gun in  his possession  which resulted  in the  death of the deceased. [402E]

JUDGMENT:      CRIMINAL APPELLATE  JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeal Nos. 213, 237 and 238 of 1977.      Appeal  under   Section  2(a)   of  the  Supreme  Court (Enlargement of  Criminal Appellate  Jurisdiction) Act, 1970 and by Special Leave from the Judgment and order dated 13-4- 77 of  the Allahabad  High Court in Govt. Appeal Nos. 637/71 and Cr. A. No. 14/71 and Govt. A. No. 621/71.      Frank Anthony,  B. P.  Maheshwari, P.  Basu and  Suresh Sethi for the Appellant.      O. P. Rana for the Respondent.      The Judgment of the Court was delivered by      JASWANT SINGH,  J. The  above noted  three appeals, the first two  out of which viz. Criminal Appeal No. 213 of 1977 under section  2(a) of  the Supreme  Court  (Enlargement  of Criminal Appellate  Jurisdiction)  Act,  1970  and  Criminal Appeal No.  237 of  1977  by  special  leave  challenge  the reversal of  acquittal and  conviction of  Salim  Zia  alias Fodi, appellant  under section  302 of the Indian Penal Code and section 27 of the Arms Act and the last one whereof viz. Criminal Appeal  No. 238 of 1977 by special leave challenges the affirmance  of conviction of the appellant under section 25 of  the Arms  Act will be disposed of by this judgment as they are  all directed  against the judgment and order dated April 13, 1977 of the Allahabad High Court.      Briefly  stated,   the  case   as  put   forth  by  the prosecution was that Jaffar Ali, the father of the appellant who migrated  to Pakistan  and is  now a Pakistani national, owned a big farm measuring approximately 397 250 acres  in villages Hamid Nagar and Parbatbans within the jurisdiction of  Police Station,  Bilaspur, District Rampur. Out of  the said area of the farm, Jaffar Ali had leased out one acre  of paddy  growing land to Habib, deceased, the son of  Bandu  (P.W.  17)  who  was  a  Mistri  or  Mechanic  by profession on  ’Ahdhiya ghalla  batai’ basis  in lieu of his services for  maintaining in  working order  the hand  pumps installed by the former for irrigating the farm. On November

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11, 1969,  the appellant armed himself with a 12 bore double barrel  gun   belonging  to   his  uncle,   Hamid  Ali,  and accompanied by  his younger brothers, Mohd. Jaffar and Salim Jaffar who  have since been acquitted, went to the aforesaid field where  the deceased  was harvesting  and thrashing the crop raised  by him  and told  the latter  that this time he would be  allowed only  one third  and not  one half  of the produce. Thereupon  the deceased protested asserting that he was entitled to half of the produce as agreed to between him and the  appellant’s father  and that  cruelty and injustice should not be perpetrated on him. Annoyed at the audacity of the deceased,  the appellant’s  aforesaid  brothers  started hurling abuses at the deceased and exhorted the appellant to finish  the   deceased  without   being  deterred   by   the consequences which  they right  have to  face Thereupon, the appellant  fired   four  shots  at  the  deceased  from  his aforesaid gun as a result whereof the deceased fell down and died on  the spot.  Intimation of  the incident  was sent by Azmat Ali  (P.W. 1)  to Bandu  (P.W. 17),  the father of the deceased through  Muzammil (P.W.  7). On  his  return  after apprising Bandu  of the  incident, Mozammil  was deputed  by Azmat Ali  to carry  the report  (Exh. Ka.  1) which  he got written by  Abrar Hussain  (P.W. 11 ) to the Police Station, Bilaspur where  it was  lodged at  5.10 P.M.  When  Muzammil reached the  Police Station,  he found the appellant already present over  there. On receipt of Exhibit Ka. 1,S.I. Narain Singh Negi  (P.W. 18) registered a case under section 302 of the Penal Code and repaired to the scene of occurrence after sending  the  appellant  to  the  Government  Dispensary  at Bilaspur for  examination of  the injuries on his person and recording  his   statement.  On  arrival  at  the  place  of occurrence, Narain  Singh Negi  prepared the  inquest report and sent  the dead  body  of  the  deceased  for  postmortem examination to  the District Hospital at Rampur where Dr. R. K. Misra,  M. O.  In-charge of  the Hospital  conducted  the autopsy and  found the following injuries on the body of the deceased:-           "1.  Multiple lacerated  gun shot  wounds of entry                in an area 2"x1/2" on front and outer side of                right thigh  lower part.  The wounds are oval                and congested  and margins are inverted. Size                1/2x1/2x depth to wounds of exit near hip. 398           2.   Multiple lacerated gun shot wounds of exit in                an area  2 1/2"x2""  on back  of right  thigh                lower part  and back of right knee joint. The                margins of  wound are  averted. Size 1/2x1/2,                There is  fracture of thigh bone in its lower                part in injuries 1 and 2.           3.   Lacerated  gun   shot  wound  of  entry  with                inverted and tattooed margins 1 1/4"x1 1/4" x                depth wound  of exist  in abdominal wall near                it right side upper joint abdominal wall.           4.   Lacerated gun  shot wound of entry 1/2"x1/4"x                depth upper  from abdominal  wall 1  1/2"  to                margin injury  No. 3.  Inverted and  tattooed                margins.           5.   Lacerated gun-shot wound of exit with averted                margins right  side of  abdominal wall 1 1/4"                to  injury   No.  4  with  a  loop  of  small                intestine coming out.           6.   Lacerated gun  shot wound  exit with  averted                margins on right side abdominal wall 11 above                and  behind  injury  No.  5  size  1/4"x1/4"x                abdominal vacity deep.

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         7.   Lacerated  gun-shot   would  4  1/4"x2  1/4"x                thickness of  right palm.  Entry palmer  side                with inverted  margins and  exit on  back  of                hand with  averted margins  with fractures of                matacarpals of little and ring fingers.           8.   Multiple gun-shot  wounds in an area 7 1/2x4"                on front and outer side of right shoulder and                right arms,  wounds of  entry. With a central                wound 1 1/4"x1/4"x2" surrounded by many small                wounds 1/10"x1/10"  and  varying  depths.  16                shots recovered.           9.   Lacerated gun-shot  wound of entry 1 1/4"x1"x                cranial cavity  deep on  right side  back  of                head 11" behind right ear brain flowing out".      On internal  examination of  the dead  body, the Doctor found all bones of the vault and base of skull fractured. He also found not only the brain membranes but the brain itself lacerated and flowing out of the surface injury. He took out 15 pellets  and one  piece of  wad out of the brain. He also found the membrane of the abdomen ruptured. According to the Doctor, the  death of  the deceased  was due  to coma  as  a result of  gun-shot injury  on the  head. On  the  basis  of dispersal of  shot and tattooing and the shape of wounds the Doctor opined  that the  aforesaid injuries  were not caused from a  distance of  15 to  20 paces  but were caused from a close distance. 399      After  usual   investigation,  the  appellant  and  his aforesaid two  brothers were  proceeded against in the Court of Additional District Magistrate (J), Rampur, who committed them to  the Court  of Section  to stand  their trial  under section 32  and section  302 read  with section  34  of  the Indian Penal  Code respectively.  At  the  said  trial,  the prosecution examined 18 witnesses including Azmat Ali, Abrar Hussain, Muzammil,  Dulah Khan, Mst. Altafi and Khairati who claimed to  be the  eye witnesses  of the occurrence. By his judgment and  order dated  December 23,  1970, the  Sessions Judge while observing that he was inclined to think that the prosecution story  was true accepted the appellant’s version contained in  Exhibit Ka-13  said to have been lodged by him at the  Police Station,  Bilaspur about ten minutes prior to the report  (Exh. Ka  1) to the effect that he had gone on a round of  his Father’s farm at about 4.00 P.M. carrying with him his  uncle’s double barrel 12 bore gun; that on reaching his field in Parbatbans, he saw Hahib deceased and Asmat Ali stealing his  paddy bags;  that  at  that  time  Shabban  of Rampur, Bhonda  alias Anis  and Amir Daulat of village Koela were working  in the  vicinity of  that place;  that  seeing this, he  challenged Habib  and Azmat  Ali  whereupon  Habib fired at him from a revolver hitting him on the right thigh; that he  remonstrated with  Habib who  fired another shot at him which  grazed past  his left thigh and that finding that Habib was  determined to  kill him  and there was no hope of escape, he  fired two  or three  shots from  his uncle’s gun which he was carrying in consequence whereof Habib fell down and Azmat  Ali ran  away and  that taking  away the revolver from Habib’s  hand, he had reached the Police Station in the tractor driven  by his  brother, Jaffar.  The Sessions Judge acquitted the  appellant and  his brothers  giving them  the benefit of  doubt observing  that the prosecution had failed to adequately  demolish the  defence version  which  left  a reasonable doubt  that the prosecution might have suppressed the revolver  used by Habib and that the appellant had fired in the  exercise of the right of private defence. On appeal, the High  Court set  aside the  acquittal of  the  appellant

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rejecting the  defence version  and convicted  him as stated above and  sentenced him  to life imprisonment under section 302 of  the. Indian  Penal Code  and  three  years  rigorous imprisonment under  section 27  of the  Arms Act maintaining his  conviction   and  sentence   of  one   year’s  rigorous imprisonment under section 25 of the Arms Act. It is against this judgment  and order  of the High Court that the present appeals are directed      Appearing in  support of the appeals, Mr. Frank Anthony has vehemently  urged that  the High  Court has  acted  with material irregularity  in ignoring the guidelines repeatedly laid down  by this  Court for  interfering with the judgment and order of acquittal and convicting the appel- 400 lant without  referring to  the conclusions,  which  in  the proved circumstances of the case, had been correctly arrived at by  the Sessions  Judge. He  has further  urged that  the genesis of the prosecution story not having been established and the  deceased who  was seen  stealing the  bags of paddy having opened  fire at  the appellant,  the latter  was full justified in  firing back at the deceased in exercise of the right of  private defence. He has also urged that the F.I.R. (Exh. Ka.  1) which  was unduly  delayed (and could not have reached the Police Station at 5.10 P.M. as sought to be made out by  the prosecution) threw a grave doubt on the veracity of the prosecution story.      We  have   given  our   anxious  consideration  to  the submissions of  the  counsel  for  the  appellant  but  find ourselves unable  to accede  to the  same. Two  inextricably linked up questions that fall for consideration in this case in view of the stand of the appellant are whether the two in juries viz. (1) lacerated wound 1 cm x 1 cm x muscle deep on medial side  of left  thigh  in  its  middle  with  inverted margins but  without any  scorching, tattooing or blackening and (2)  lacerated wound  1/4cmx1/4cm x  muscle deep  on the middle and  back of  left thigh,  inner  side  with  averted margins but  without any  scorching, tattooing or blackening stated by  D.W. 1,  Dr. K.  L. Verma.  Medical officer,  I/C Bilaspur Dispensary,  to have  been observed  by him  on the person of  the appellant  at 6.00  P.M. On  November 11,1969 were caused  as a  result of shots fired from revolver (Exh. 4) in  the course  of the  same occurrence which resulted in the death  of the  deceased and  whether the  appellant  was protected by  the right  of private  defence  of  person  or property.      In regard  to the  first question,  the High  Court has after careful scrutiny of the, depositions of D.W. 1, Dr. K. L. Verma,  and Dr.  B.  C.  Joshi,  Chief  Medical  officer, Lucknow whom  it examined  as an expert under section 391 of the Code  of Criminal  Procedure come to the conclusion that the above  noted injuries  were not  gun shot  injuries  and could  not  be  caused  with  revolver  (Exh.  4)  and  were fabricated to  look like  gun shot wounds for the purpose of creating a defence. It has rightly pointed out that there is no mention  in the  injury report  (Ex. Kha. II) prepared by Dr. Verma  after examination  of the person of the appellant that  the   said  injuries   were  through  and  through  or communicating wounds and that since Dr. Verma admittedly did not try  to as  certain by  use of  probe whether  they were communicating injuries  or not,  he could not be expected to give a  categoric opinion  about their   character merely on the basis  of the  condition of  their margins or edges. The High Court has also correctly pointed out that the aforesaid injuries on  the person  of the  appellant were not gun shot wounds as usually the

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401 entrance wound  in fire arm injuries is smaller and the exit wound is  bigger but  curiously enough this was not the case here. The  High  Court  has  also  rightly  found  that  the aforesaid injuries  on the person of the appellant could not be gun shot wounds as the exit wound was not only smaller in dimension than  the entry  wound but  was  also  smaller  in dimension than  the size of the cartridge (Exh. 7) taken out of the  revolver (Exh.  4) which  according to the appellant was used by the deceased for causing injuries on his person. The  observations   of  the   High   Court   receive   ample confirmation from  the statement  of Dr.  B. C.  Joshi which appears to  have been  based on  his personal experience and notable works  on Medical  Jurisprudence and  Toxicology  by celebrated authors like Sydney Smith, John Gallister, Taylor and others  that in case of a bullet injury except where the bullet gets  fragmented after  entering the  body and only a portion thereof  passes out  of the exit wound or the bullet remains embedded  in the  body and  does not pass out in the normal course  and is  subsequently taken  out or  except in case of  a point  blank wound  (which is  not  the  case  of defence), it  is practically  and usually  not possible that the size  of the  wound of  exit may  be  smaller  than  the diameter of  the bullet. On being shown the aforesaid bullet (exh. 7) Dr. Joshi stated that if the diameter of the bullet is .8 cm it could not usually cause the exit wound described as injury  No. 2  in Exhibit  Kha. II  unless the bullet got fragmented inside  the body  or only  a small length thereof pierced  and  made  the  exit  wound.  Dr.  Joshi  has  also expressly stated  that considering  the  data  as  given  in Exhibit Kha.  II it  is  doubtful  that  the  aforesaid  two injuries claimed  by Dr.  Verma to have been observed by him on the  person of  the appellant  were bullet injuries. Thus the forensic  medicine expert  evidence in  respect  of  the characteristics of  the wounds said to have been observed on the person  of the  appellant rules  out  the  case  of  the infliction of the injuries on the person of the appellant by revolver (Exh. 4).      That these  injuries were  caused in  the course of the same incident  which resulted  in the  death of the deceased also seems  to be highly improbable in view of the statement of Narayan  Singh Negi,  Investigating Officer,  who reached the scene of occurrence within an hour of the lodging of the report (Exh.  Ka. I) that he did not even on search find any blood at any place except in front of or underneath the body of the deceased.      This takes us to the consideration of the other crucial question viz.  whether the  appellant was  protected by  the right of  private defence  of person or property. It is true that the  burden on all accused person to establish the plea of self defence is not as onerous as the one which lies 402 on  the  prosecution  and  that  while  the  prosecution  is required to  prove its  case beyond  reasonable  doubt,  the accused need  not establish  the plea  to the  hilt and  may discharge his  onus by  establishing a mere preponderance of probabilities either  by laying a basis for that plea in the cross-examination of  prosecution witnesses  or by  adducing defence  evidence.   (See  Partap  v.  The  State  of  Uttar Pradesh(1) and Munshi Ram & Ors. v. Delhi Administration(2). In  the   instant  case,  however,  the  appellant  has  not discharged  that  burden  either  by  adducing  any  defence evidence or  by eliciting from the persecution witnesses the existence  of   facts  and   circumstances  satisfying   the requisite test  of preponderance  of probabilities entitling

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him to  exercise the  right of  private  defence  either  of person or of property.      In  relation   to  the  right  of  private  defence  of property, it may be observed that the appellant has not been able to  establish by producing any witness in defence or by eliciting from  the prosecution  witnesses    the  aforesaid paddy field belonged to him or that it had not, as stated by Bandu (P.W.17), Azmat Ali (P.W.1) and Muzammil (P.W.7), been leased out  by the  appellant’s father  to the  deceased  on ’Ahdhiya ghalla  batai’ basis or that the deceased and Azmat Ali (P.W.1)  committed theft or attempted to commit theft of the paddy to which he was lawfully entitled.      The appellant has also not established by examining any of the  three witnesses  alleged by  him in his report (Exh. Ka. 13)  to be  working in  the vicinity  of  the  place  of occurrence or  by eliciting  from the eye witnesses produced by the  prosecution or  summoned and  examined by  the Court that Habib  deceased-fired any  shot at  him  from  revolver (Exh. 4)  and that it was only in self defence that he fired the shots  from the  gun in his possession which resulted in the death of the deceased. Muzammil (P.W.7) has in answer to a question  put to  him  in  cross-examination  emphatically denied that Habib deceased was armed with a revolver or that he fired  any shot  in the  course  of  the  incident  which resulted  in   his  death.   Azmat  Ali   (P.W.1)  has  also unequivocally  stated   in  cross-examination   that   Habib deceased did  not use  any revolver  at the  spot  and  that neither he  nor Habib  committed any  theft of  the paddy as alleged by  the appellant.  Even Athar Ali and Mst. Shafiqan who were  examined as  Court witnesses  have clearly  stated that Habib  did not  fire any  pistol at  the spot.  It  is, therefore, crystal  clear that  the Sessions  Judge  grossly erred in  assuming that  the appellant was fired at by Habib and that  it was in exercise of the right of private defence that he in turn fired at Habib to save his own life.      (1) A.I.R. 1976 S.C. 966.      (2) [1960] 2 S.C.R. 455. 403      Let us  now examine  the contention  of counsel for the appellant that  in reversing  the  order  of  acquittal  and convicting the  appellant under  section 302  af the  Indian Penal Code  and section  27 of  the Arms Act, the High Court ignored  the   principles  laid   down  by  this  Court  for interference with  the orders  of acquittal.  The scope  and powers of the appellate court in an appeal against acquittal were clearly  defined by the Privy Council in Sheo Swarup v. King  Emperor(1)   and  Nur  Mohammed  v.  Emperor(2)  which received the  stamp of  approval of  this Court  in  Sarlwat Singh   v. State of Rajasthan(3) Ramaphupala Reddy & Ors. v. The State  of Andhra  Pradesh(4) Gopi Nath Ganga Ram Surve & Ors. v.  State of  Maharashtra(5) Dharam Das & Ors. v. State of U.P.(6)  Lakha Yadav  v. State  of Bihar(7)  Samson  Hyam Kemkar v.  State of  Maharashtra(5) and  Barati v.  State of U.P.(9). The  legal position  emerging from  these decisions may be summarised thus:           "1.  The High  Court in an appeal against an order                of acquittal under section 417 of the Code of                Criminal Code,  1898 has full power to review                at large  the evidence  on which the order of                acquittal  was   founded  and  to  reach  the                conclusion that  upon the evidence, the order                of acquittal should be reversed.           2.   The  different   phraseology  used   in   the                judgments of this Court such as-                (a) ’substantial and compelling reasons’;

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              (b) ’good and sufficiently cogent reasons’;                (c) ’strong reasons’,                are not  intended to  curtail  or  place  any                limitation  on  the  undoubted  power  of  an                appellate  court   in   an   appeal   against                acquittal to  review the  entire evidence and                to come to its own conclusion as stated above                but  in   doing  so  it  should  give  proper                consideration to  such  matters  as  (i)  the                views  of   the  trial   Judge  as   to   the                credibility  of   the  witnesses;   (ii)  the                presumption of  innocence in  favour  of  the                accused, a presumption certainly not weakened                by the  fact that  he: has  been acquitted at                his trial, (iii) the      (1) 61 I.A.398.      (2) A.I.R.1945 P.C.151.      (3) [1961] 3 S.C.R.120.      (4) [1970] 3 S.C.C.474.      (5) [1970] 3 S.C.C.627.      (6) [1973] 2 S.C.C.216.      (7) [1973] 2 S.C.C.424.      (8) [1974] 3 S.C.C.494.      (9) [1974] 4 S.C.C.258. 404                right of  the accused  to the  benefit of any                real  and  reasonable  doubt;  and  (iv)  the                slowness of  an appellate Court in disturbing                a finding  of fact  arrived at by a Judge who                had the advantage of seeing the witnesses."      We have  perused the impugned judgment with care but do not think that the principles laid down by this Court in the above  mentioned   decisions  with  regard  to  disposal  of acquittal appeals were lost sight of by the High Court      The appellant’s  version that  the injuries observed on his person  by Dr. K. L. Verma on November 11, 1969 were the result of shots fired by the deceased from revolver (Exh. 4) not  having   been  established  and  the  appellant  having admitted that  he fired  two or three shots at the deceased, the High  Court was  fully justified  in reversing the trial court’s order  of  acquittal  of  the  appellant  which  was erroneously made  by the  Sessions Judge  on  the  basis  of surmises and  conjectures and  convicting him specially when the prosecution  story  that  the  appellant  fired  at  the deceased without any justifiable provocation was established to the  hilt by  the evidence  of a  number  of  prosecution witnesses who  even according  to the  Sessions Judge gave a true account of the occurrence.      In the  result, we  do not  find  any  merit  in  these appeals which  are dismissed. As the appellant appears to be on bail,  he will  surrender himself  to his  bail  bond  to undergo the unexpired portion of his sentence.      Before parting with the file,, we would like to observe that since  the appellant’s  statement under  section 342 of the Code  of Criminal  Procedure shows that he is a novelist and has  made  valuable  contribution  to  enrich  the  Urdu literature, the  Government may consider the desirability of giving him  a special  class and entrusting such work to him during his  incarceration as  may help sustain his aforesaid interest, promote  his creative  genius and  result  in  his emancipation. N.V.K.                                     Appeal dismissed. 405

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