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1991 DIGILAW 69 (MP)

HEERAMAN v. STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH

1991-02-14

P.C.PATHAK, S.K.CHAWLA

body1991
S. K. CHAWLA, J. ( 1 ) APPELLANT Heeraman by this appeal challenges his conviction under Section 302, L. P. C. and sentence of imprisonment for life. ( 2 ) APPELLANT Heeraman was earning his living by begging. He lived in village Ghisi with his two wives Taribai and Ramkalibai. Taribai was younger while Ramkalibai his elder wife. The appellant has also a son named Amin (P. W. 5), aged about 5 years, from his younger wife Taribai. Taribai is dead. ( 3 ) THE prosecution story briefly stated was that appellant Heeraman was addicted to liquor and gambling. There was a festival called Jyuti festival on 28 July 1984. On that day the appellant was seen wandering in his village Ghisi in a drunken condition. He had also gambled at the house of Bhupat (P. W. 8) of his village on that day. He had returned to his house at about 10. 00 in the night. His brother-in-law Brijlal (P. W. 2) belonging to a different village was waiting for him at the house. The appellant, in the presence of Brijlal, quarreled with his wife deceased Taribai. When Brijlal protested and intervened, the appellant left his house. It is the prosecution case that subsequently the appellant again returned to his house and killed his wife Taribai by assaulting her with Lathi and knife. The murder was detected on the following morning when the dead body of Taribai was found lying in a room of the house. The only inmate of the house was child Amin (P. W. 5), aged about 5 years. ( 4 ) A report of the incident was lodged by Dilip (P. W. 3), real brother and neighbour of appellant Heeraman. Post-mortem examination of the deceased showed that there were seven incised injuries on hands and legs, a contusion on the left hand finger and another contusion on the skull on the frontal region, vide post-mortem report, Ex. P-8. The contused wound on the skull was responsible for the death. The frontal bone was thus fractured with contusion in the brain. Blood clots and blood effusion was seen in membrane and brain tissues. The cause of the death was shock due to hemorrhage and injury to skull. ( 5 ) THE appellant was apprehended on 5/8/1984 when his shirt and Lung; worn by him were seized on suspicion of being blood-stained. Blood clots and blood effusion was seen in membrane and brain tissues. The cause of the death was shock due to hemorrhage and injury to skull. ( 5 ) THE appellant was apprehended on 5/8/1984 when his shirt and Lung; worn by him were seized on suspicion of being blood-stained. The appellant further got a Lath; and knife recovered on his information and at his instance from inside his house. The report of Chemical Examiner, Ex. P-20, confirmed presence of blood on shirt and Lungi of the appellant and Lathi recovered at his instance. No blood was however, found on the knife. The report of serologist has not been filed. It is, therefore, not known whether the blood found on the clothes of the appellant and Lathi was human blood. ( 6 ) THE appellant abjured his guilt. His defense was that his elder wife Ramkalibai had left his house 15 days prior to the date of incident for village Bordahi. He had also left his Ghisi house two days prior to the date of the incident and had gone to village, Bordahi to his elder wife. ( 7 ) THE learned Additional Sessions Judge, Seoni found the appellant guilty and accordingly convicted and sentenced him as already indicated. Aggrieved from that judgment, the appellant has filed this appeal through jail. ( 8 ) IN this case all the material witnesses turned hostile. Dhruvdas (P. W. 9) denied that he had gambled on the day of Jyuti festival i. e. on 28/7/1984 with appellant and others at the house of Bhopat in the village of the occurrence. Bhopat (P. W. 8) also denied that any gambling had taken place at his house on that date or that the appellant was one of the participants in the gambling. Dilip (P. W. 3) brother and neighbour of the appellant, denied that he had seen the appellant at his Ghisi house on the night of the festival. Brijlal (P. W. 2) brother-in-law of the appellant and living in outside village, who was supposed to say that he had visited Ghisi house of the appellant on the material day, deposed that he did visit Ghisi house of the appellant on the material day but denied having seen the appellant at his house. Brijlal (P. W. 2) brother-in-law of the appellant and living in outside village, who was supposed to say that he had visited Ghisi house of the appellant on the material day, deposed that he did visit Ghisi house of the appellant on the material day but denied having seen the appellant at his house. This witness happened to speak stray sentences here and there in his testimony from which the learned trial Judge held that it was established that the appellant was present in his Ghisi house on the material day. Amin (P. W. 5), a child aged 5 years, who is son of the appellant from his younger wife deceased Taribai, was supposed to be an eye witness. He too turned hostile but he also happened to utter some sentences from which the learned trial Judge inferred that the appellant was not only present in his Ghisi house on the material night but had also killed Taribai. ( 9 ) IT will thus be seen that conclusion about guilt of the appellant was drawn by the learned trial Judge from certain parts of evidence of two hostile witnesses Brijlal (P. W. 2) brother-in-law of the appellant, and child witness Amin (P. W. 5), his son. It is the evidence of these witnesses which deserves to be carefully scrutinized to find how much reliance can be placed on their testimony. ( 10 ) BRIJLAL (P. W. 2) at the outset deposed that he had reached village Ghisi on the day of Jyuti festival. At that time he had seen the dead body of Taribai lying inside a room of the house of the appellant. He further deposed that the relations between appellant and deceased Taribai were cordial. He was then declared hostile by the prosecution. In cross examination at the instance of the prosecution, he deposed that he had reached village Ghisi at about 6 or 7 P. M. in the evening on the day of the Jyuti festival. He had also visited the house of the appellant on that night. He had then not come to know of any quarrel having taken place between appellant Heerarnan and his wife Taribai. He remained at the house of the appellant for 1 or 2 hours. He had also visited the house of the appellant on that night. He had then not come to know of any quarrel having taken place between appellant Heerarnan and his wife Taribai. He remained at the house of the appellant for 1 or 2 hours. He stated further down in his deposition that when he had gone and stayed for a short while in the house of the appellant, appellant Heeraman was not in a drunken condition but in a sober stare. This piece of evidence was utilized by the learned trial Judge to hold that the appellant was at his house in village Ghisi on the fateful night. Brijlal (P. W. 2), however, stated categorically both before as also after uttering the above words that he had not seen appellant Heeraman at his house on the material night. He went to the length of stating that appellant had left his house 3 days prior to the day of Jyuti festival and, therefore, himself questioned how could be have seen the appellant at the latters house. But the above stray statement by the witness that when he visited the appellants house, the appellant was not in a drunken condition but in a sober stare, was utilized by the learned trial Judge to base his finding that the appellant was in his house on the material night. In our opinion, Brijlal was a totally unreliable witness. He stood thoroughly discredited in his cross examination. It was wrong to pick out stray sentence spoken by him to make the same basis of any conclusions as the learned trial Judge apparently did. Speaking about such kind of hostile witnesses, their Lordships of the Supreme Court in the case of Satpaul v. Delhi Administrational, observed in paragraph 53 of the judgment as followed: It was, therefore, not proper for the courts below to pick out a sentence or two from their evidence to support the evidence of trap witnesses. ( 11 ) COMING to the evidence of child witness Amin (P. W. 5), it is recognized legal position that it is notoriously dangerous to accept the evidence of a child witness unless satisfaction is reached that it was free from tutoring and upon close scrutiny it bears the stamp of naturalness and truth. ( 11 ) COMING to the evidence of child witness Amin (P. W. 5), it is recognized legal position that it is notoriously dangerous to accept the evidence of a child witness unless satisfaction is reached that it was free from tutoring and upon close scrutiny it bears the stamp of naturalness and truth. The learned trial Judge recorded a certificate before starting to record the evidence of Amin that he understood questions only partially and gave only partial replies and that too after pauses. He was naturally not administered any oath. His evidence is short and it may be set out with advantage as below: hi