Supreme Court of India

CRIMINAL APPEAL NO.820 OF 2010 Judgment Date: Dec 09, 2014


                                                                  REPORTABLE

                        IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
                       CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
                       CRIMINAL APPEAL NO.820 OF 2010

Kunwarpal @ Surajpal & Ors.                              ..    Appellants

                                   versus

State of Uttarakhand And Anr.                             ..  Respondents

                               J U D G M E N T

C. NAGAPPAN, J.

This appeal is preferred against the judgment dated 18.8.1991 passed by  the
High Court of Uttarakhand at Nainital in Criminal Appeal No.1418 of 2001.

Appellants 1 to 4 stood charged for the  offence  under  Section  302/34  in
Sessions Trial No.195 of 1991 on  the  file  of  Additional  Sessions  Judge
Roorkee and the Trial  Court  convicted  all  and  sentenced  them  each  to
undergo life imprisonment and to  pay  a  fine  of  Rs.500  in  default,  to
undergo rigorous imprisonment for one  year  each.   Accused  Nos.  1  to  4
preferred appeal in  Criminal Appeal No.1418 of 2001 on  the  file  of  High
Court and the appeal came to be dismissed.  Challenging the  conviction  and
sentence accused Nos. 1 to 4 preferred   the  present  appeal.   During  the
hearing the learned senior counsel appearing for  the  appellants  submitted
that appellant No.4 Atara Singh died during pendency of the  appeal  and  it
was endorsed by the learned  counsel  appearing  for  the  respondent-State.
Hence the appeal stands abated  insofar as he is concerned.

Shorn of unnecessary details the case of  the  prosecution  is  as  follows:
PW1 Gajendra is the son of deceased Ranjit Singh.  Accused Nos. 1 to  3  are
real brothers.  Accused No.4 is  their  cousin.  PW1  Gajendra   owned  plot
No.180 in village Mohammadpur Panda and the adjacent plot  belonged  to  the
accused persons and on account of the pending litigation between them  there
was enmity.

On 14.4.1991 at about 11.00 a.m. PW2 Suggan and Jai Ram were  cutting  wheat
in the field of PW1 Gajendra and Ranjit Singh came to the field.  Thereafter
accused Nos.1 to 4 armed with lathies and tabbal  came there and  threatened
Ranjit Singh to withdraw the case against them and  beat  him  with  lathies
and tabbal .  PW 2 Suggan, PW3 Atmaram and PW4 Chaman  Lal  and  others  saw
the occurrence.  Ranjit Singh became unconscious. PW2  Suggan  informed  PW1
Gajendra  about the occurrence.  PW1  Gajendra  came  and  took  his  father
injured Ranjit Singh to JNSM Hospital Roorkee.   Dr.  Jugal  Kishore  Mittal
examined Ranjit Singh at 1.20 p.m. on 14.4.1991 in  the  said  hospital  and
admitted him as in-patient.  At about 5.30 p.m. on  same  day  PW1  Gajendra
lodged Ex.Ka-1 written complaint in the Police  Station,  Bhagwanpur  and  a
case under Sections 323, 324, 506 and 307 IPC was registered    against  the
accused persons.  Exh. Ka-4 is the First Information Report, Exh.  Ka-70  is
the G.D. Report. PW9 Sub-Inspector R.S. Tiwari  took  up  the  investigation
and examined PWs 2 to 4 and some other witnesses. On 15.4.1991 Ranjit  Singh
succumbed  to his injuries.  The First Information Report  was  altered  and
the investigation was taken up by SHO Ajay Kumar and he  visited  the  place
of occurrence and prepared  Exh.Ka-8  plan  and  seized  the  blood  stained
clothes under  Exh.Ka-9    Memo.    He   conducted   inquest   and  prepared
Exh.Ka-5 report.  He gave Exh.Ka-11 requisition for conducting post mortem.

PW 6 Dr. K.P. Sarabhai conducted post-mortem on the body  of   Ranjit  Singh
at 4.30 p.m. on 15.4.1991 and found the following ante-mortem injuries:
Stitched wound 4 cm x 4 stitches  on beam of head, 12 cm from left ear.
Traumatic swelling 10 cm x 7 cm on beam of right upper arm.
Traumatic swelling 22 cm x 7 cm  on beam  of  right  forearm  and  hand  and
there was fracture on both bones of right forearm.
Stitched wound 2 cm x 2 stitches on beam of left upper arm 4 cm  above  left
elbow.
Abraded contusion with traumatic swelling 14 cm x 8 cm  on  beam   of   left
elbow on upper arm, and fracture of shaft of humerus
Traumatic swelling 6 cm x 4 cm on beam of left wrist joint and  fracture  of
ulna lower end.
Abraded contusion 4 cm x 3 cm on lateral part of  right  side  chest,  6  cm
below right nipple.
Contusion 10 cm x 8 cm on left side of chest, 6 cm below the nipple.
Contusion 20 cm x 10 cm on right thigh.
Abrasion 2 cm x 1 cm on right side of right knee joint
Stitched wound 4 cm x 4 stitches on front side of right leg.
Stitched  wound 3 cm x 2 stitches on front part left leg.
Abraded contusion 10 cm x 5 cm on lower part of left leg
Abrasion 2 cm x 1 cm on left side of iliac crest.
Contusions of 28 cm x 18 cm on beam of left side chest and abdomen.

On internal examination he found fracture of 4th to 7th ribs on  right  side
and 3rd to 8th ribs on the left side.  He expressed opinion that  the  death
has occurred  on  account  of  shock  and   hemorrhage  due  to  ante-mortem
injuries.

During the trial prosecution examined PWs 1 to 9 and marked documents.   The
accused persons were examined under Section 313 Criminal Procedure Code  and
their answers  were recorded.  No witness was examined on their  side.   The
Trial Court convicted all the accused and sentenced them  as  stated  above.
The appeal preferred by the accused  came to be  dismissed  and  hence  they
have filed the present appeal.

Mr. K.T.S. Tulsi, senior counsel  appearing  for  some  of  the  appellants,
contended that the alleged eye witnesses to the occurrence PW3  Atmaram  and
PW4 Chaman Lal are chance witnesses and  there  is  significant  absence  of
their names in the FIR and the occurrence took place in a different  village
and even if they were present they could not have seen  the  occurrence  and
PW3 Atmaram had animosity against accused no.1 Kunwarpal  @  Surajpal  since
marriage proposal of his sister's  sister-in-law  with  A1  failed  and  the
prosecution  has  not  proved  motive  and  it  is  unsafe  to  convict  the
appellants/accused and the impugned judgment is liable to be set aside.

Mr. Gurukrishna Kumar, senior counsel appearing for  the  other  appellants,
contended that PW3 Atmaram and PW4 Chaman Lal were not aware of the name  of
the village where the land they were harvesting is situated and  they  could
not have witnessed the occurrence from a distance of about  450Ft.  and  the
entire story is not narrated in the complaint and the said factors if  taken
individually may not be significant but taken cumulatively, the presence  of
the said witnesses in the occurrence place is doubtful  and  the  conviction
imposed on them cannot be sustained.

Per contra, Mr. Jatinder Kumar Bhatia, counsel  for  the  first  respondent-
State  and  Mr.  J.C.  Gupta,  senior  counsel  appearing  for  the   second
respondent, contended  that  village  Mohammedpur  Panda  and  Almaspur  are
adjacent villages and the occurrence land lies in the  border  of  both  the
villages and the  occurrence  took  place  during  harvest  season  and  PW3
Atmaram and PW4 Chaman Lal were harvesting crops in the nearby land  and  on
hearing the hue and cry of Ranjit Singh they happened to see  accused  nos.1
to 4 attacking  Ranjit  Singh  with  tabbal  and  lathis  and  there  is  no
requirement of mentioning the names of all the witnesses in the FIR and  the
statements of witnesses were recorded by the Investigation  Officer  on  the
occurrence  night  itself  and  relying  on  the  testimonies  of  the   eye
witnesses,  the  courts  below  have  convicted  the  accused  and   it   is
sustainable.

The occurrence had taken place at 11.00 a.m. on 14.4.1991 in  the  field  of
Ranjit Singh when PW2 Suggan and Jai Ram were harvesting the wheat  crop  in
the said field.  PW2 Suggan informed  PW1  Gajendra  Singh,  son  of  Ranjit
Singh, about the occurrence, who rushed to the place of occurrence and  took
severely injured Ranjit Singh to Roorkee hospital and  after  admitting  him
there, lodged Exh.Ka-1 complaint at Police  Station  Bhagwanpur  leading  to
registration of case against the accused persons.  On the  death  of  Ranjit
Singh on 15.4.1991 in the  hospital  the  offence  was  altered  to  one  of
murder.  Though PW1 Gajendra  Singh  is  the  author  of  FIR,  he  has  not
witnessed the occurrence and he has lodged the complaint  on  the  basis  of
information furnished by PW2 Suggan, in which he  has  mentioned  about  the
attack with weapons made by all the four accused on his father Ranjit  Singh
during the occurrence.  Though Suggan  was  examined  as  PW2,  he  did  not
support the prosecution case and was declared hostile.

PW3 Atmaram and PW4 Chaman Lal were examined by the  prosecution  as  having
witnessed the occurrence.  The agricultural land of PW3 Atmaram  in  village
Almaspur  lay  near  the  agricultural  land  of  Ranjit  Singh  in  village
Mohammedpur Panda.  According to the PW3 Atmaram the  boundary  of  land  of
both villages join at the place of occurrence.  PW3 Atmaram and  PW4  Chaman
Lal have testified that they were  harvesting  the  crop  of  wheat  in  the
agricultural land of PW3 Atmaram in the morning on the  occurrence  day  and
at 11.00 a.m. they were eating breads sitting on tube-well  and  on  hearing
shrieks of Ranjit Singh they stood up and saw accused  no.1  Kunwarpal  with
pointed tabbal and the other three  accused  with  lathis  attacking  Ranjit
Singh with the said weapons and when they went near, the accused fled  away.
 They have further testified that PW2 Suggan and Jai Ram were cutting  wheat
in the occurrence land and they also witnessed the occurrence.

It cannot be denied that the occurrence took  place  during  harvest  season
and PW3 Atmaram was harvesting the crop of wheat in his land with  the  help
of PW4 Chaman Lal.  Their presence near the occurrence place is natural  and
they cannot be termed as chance witnesses as contended  by  the  appellants.
It is true that their names are not found mentioned in the FIR.  As  already
seen, the complaint was lodged  by  PW1  Gajendra  Singh  on  the  basis  of
information furnished by PW2 Suggan  about  the  occurrence.   There  is  no
requirement of law for mentioning the names of  all  the  witnesses  in  the
FIR, the object of which is only to set the criminal law in  motion  [Nirpal
Singh & Ors.  Vs.  State of Haryana (1977) 2 SCC 131; Bhagwan Singh  &  Ors.
Vs.  State of Madhya Pradesh (2002) 4 SCC 85; Raj Kishore  Jha   Vs.   State
of Bihar & Ors. (2003) 11 SCC 519].  In  this  context  it  is  relevant  to
point out that  the  statements  of  all  witnesses  were  recorded  by  the
Investigation Officer in the  night  of  the  occurrence  day  itself.   Non
mention of the names of PW3 Atmaram and PW4 Chaman Lal in the FIR  does  not
affect the prosecution case as rightly held by the courts below.

The other contention raised by the learned  counsel  of  the  appellants  is
that PW3 Atmaram and PW4 Chaman Lal being at a distance of 450 Ft. from  the
occurrence place could not have seen the attack made on Ranjit  Singh.   The
site plan prepared by the Investigation Officer is  exhibited  in  the  case
and it shows the occurrence place as well  as  the  land  belonging  to  PW3
Atmaram.  Harvesting of the wheat crop in the land of PW3 Atmaram  commenced
one day prior to the day of occurrence and got  completed  just  before  the
occurrence.  In their testimonies  PW3  Atmaram  and  PW4  Chaman  Lal  have
stated that they could view the occurrence from the place  where  they  were
standing and when they rushed near all the accused fled away.   Evidence  on
record discloses that there was no standing crop in between  the  lands  and
the view was clear enabling them to see  the  occurrence  and  there  is  no
doubt in it.  It was argued on behalf of the  appellants  that  PW3  Atmaram
had animosity against accused no.1 Kunwarpal since marriage of his  sister's
sister-in-law with A1 failed.  PW3  Atmaram  in  his  cross-examination  has
admitted that there was marriage proposal of  accused  no.1  Kunwarpal  with
his sister's sister-in-law and that did not materialize and he was  not  the
person who mediated it and he has also specifically  denied  the  suggestion
that  he  developed  animosity  against  A1  in  this  regard.   Hence  this
contention of the appellants is  devoid  of  merit.   As  already  seen  PW3
Atmaram and PW4 Chaman Lal are independent witnesses and  their  testimonies
corroborate each other and there is no reason for  them  to  falsely  depose
against  the  accused  persons  and  nothing  is  elicited  in  the   cross-
examination to discredit their testimonies and they are credible  and  merit
acceptance.

Ranjit Singh died  of  injuries  sustained  by  him  in  the  occurrence  is
established by the oral testimony of PW6 Dr.  K.P.  Sarabhai  who  conducted
autopsy and the post-mortem report issued by him.

According to the complainant there  was  litigation  between  them  and  the
accused persons leading to enmity. PW3 Atmaram has also  stated  that  there
was litigation between them and it culminated in the occurrence.   Animosity
is a double edged sword.  While it can be a basis for false implication,  it
can also be a basis for the crime [Ruli Ram & Anr.  Vs.   State  of  Haryana
(2002) 7 SCC 691; State of Punjab  Vs.  Sucha Singh  &  Ors.  (2003)  3  SCC
153].  In the instant case there is no foundation established  for the  plea
of false implication advanced by the accused and on the other hand  evidence
shows that enmity has led to the occurrence.  The  conviction  and  sentence
imposed on the appellants is based on proper  appreciation  of  evidence  on
record and does not call for any interference.

There are no merits in the appeal.  The same is dismissed.

                                        ..................................J.
                                             (V. Gopala Gowda)

                                         .................................J.
                                             (C. Nagappan)
New Delhi;
December  9, 2014.

ITEM NO.1A-For Judgment      COURT NO.10               SECTION II

               S U P R E M E  C O U R T  O F  I N D I A
                       RECORD OF PROCEEDINGS

                      Criminal Appeal  No(s).  820/2010

KUNWARPAL @ SURAJPAL & ORS.                        Appellant(s)

                                VERSUS

STATE OF UTTARKHAND & ANR.                         Respondent(s)

Date : 09/12/2014 This appeal was called on for JUDGMENT today.

For Appellant(s)  Mr. Prafulla K. Behera, Adv.
                     Mr. S. S. Nehra,Adv.

For Respondent(s)
                     Mr. Rajiv Ranjan Dwivedi,Adv.

                        Mr. Mukesh Verma, Adv.
                     Mr. Jatinder Kumar Bhatia,Adv.

                     Mr. Rajiv Nanda,Adv.

            Hon'ble Mr. Justice C. Nagappan pronounced the judgment  of  the
Bench comprising Hon'ble Mr. Justice V.Gopala Gowda  and His Lordship.
            The appeal is dismissed in terms of the signed order.

    (VINOD KUMAR)                               (MALA KUMARI SHARMA)
      COURT MASTER                                COURT MASTER
            (Signed Reportable judgment is placed on the file)