B. K. SHARMA, J. ( 1 ) THIS is an appeal against the judgment and order dated 5-10-1979, passed by Sri C. B. C. Mishra, the then Judicial Magistrate, Mirzapur in Criminal Case No. 412 of 1978 under Sections 420/406 IPC, Police Station Vindhyachal District Mirzapur, whereby he acquitted the accused-respondent of the offences under Sections 420/406 IPC. ( 2 ) I have heard the learned A. G. A. and the learned counsel for Siya Ram accused-respondent and have also gone through the record. ( 3 ) THE informant in this case was Karimullah. The prosecution case was that the informant Karimullah was the owner of the Truck No. UPG-2244 whose chassis No. 3420029608219 was, having purchased it on 27-7-1977 from M/s. Agrawal Sangam Finance Co. , Allahabad under a hire purchase agreement, that on 10-10-1977 at 8 a. m. he had entrusted the said truck to Siya Ram accused-respondent for taking to the workshop of Gama mechanic and get it repaired, that the accused-respondent not having returned with the truck, after waiting for 4-5 days, the informant went to Gama Mechanic and learnt that the Truck had never reached to his workshop, then he went to the house of the accused-respondent and learnt that he has gone on truck with his father, that he kept on searching for the vehicle and ultimately on getting a clue, he went to Obra on 22-2-1978 and found the accused-respondent and his father both present with the said truck and on his asking them to take the truck of his place, they denied that it was his vehicle and prepared to quarrel. He learnt that they were using a changed and fictitious registration number U. T. N. 6168 on it and were plying it at the place of Bhagwan Dass Thikedar, Obra. He ultimately moved an application on 27-2-1978 before the Superintendent of Police, whereupon, the case was registered at the police station. The Truck No. U. T. N. 6168 was deposited by the accused- respondent at police station, Chopan on 23-2-1978 alongwith a writing alleging a dispute about it.
He ultimately moved an application on 27-2-1978 before the Superintendent of Police, whereupon, the case was registered at the police station. The Truck No. U. T. N. 6168 was deposited by the accused- respondent at police station, Chopan on 23-2-1978 alongwith a writing alleging a dispute about it. The claim of the informant being that this truck was his own and it was being used under the fictitious New No. UTN 6168, the I. O. took the said truck into custody on learning that it is lying in deposit at police station Chopan and sent it for technical examination to the Director Forensic Laboratory, Lucknow for scientific examination. The examination at the laboratory revealed that the original chasis number of the truck has been tampered with and it was found that the original number was the same as related to the Truck No. UPG 2244 of the informant and that it has been tampered with. ( 4 ) AT the trial, the accused-respondent denied the charges under Sections 420/406 I. P. C. ( 5 ) AT the trial, the prosecution led the evidence of Ram Krishna Agrawal, manager of Sangam Finance Company to the effect that the accused-respondent Siya Ram and one Gulam Rasool had sold Truck No. UPG 2244, Chasis No. 3420029 608219 to the Finance Company on 3-6-1977 for Rs. 23,000. 00 and that its receipt (Ext. Ka-2) had been prepared, sale letters (Ex. Ka-3 and Ex. Ka-4) were executed by the vendors and the purchasers and the necessary formalities were done about the transfer in the office of the R. T. O. , Allahabad. His further evidence was that the same truck has been sold by the Finance Company to the informant on 27-7-1977 under a hire purchase agreement and the necessary formalities about the transfer had been done with the R. T. O. office vide Ex. Ka-6 and Ex. Ka-7. The payment receipts were Ex. Ka-8 to Ex. Ka-12. Ex. Ka-14 was the certificate issued by the Company in favour of the informant. The evidence of entrustment was given by the informant Karimullah P. W. 8 and Nandi P. W. 2. Dr. G. D. Misra, P. W. 1, proved the Forensic Laboratorys report. ( 6 ) IN his statement under Section 240 Cr.
Ka-8 to Ex. Ka-12. Ex. Ka-14 was the certificate issued by the Company in favour of the informant. The evidence of entrustment was given by the informant Karimullah P. W. 8 and Nandi P. W. 2. Dr. G. D. Misra, P. W. 1, proved the Forensic Laboratorys report. ( 6 ) IN his statement under Section 240 Cr. P. C. before framing the charge, the accused respondent denied that informant Karimullah entrusted him with Truck No. UPG 2244 for taking it to Gama, mechanic, for repair. He has also denied having taken the truck elsewhere. He claimed that he had been prosecuted on account of enmity. In his statement under Section 313 Cr. P. C. after close of prosecution evidence he claimed that the truck was his. He denied that Karimullah gave his truck to him or that he (the accused-respondent) was driver of the informant. He claimed that Truck No. UTN 6168 was his truck which he had purchsed from Prrem Kabari who had purchased if from disposal, that he had got registration done as per rules, that the financiers always obtained signatures on blank papers and misused the same. He denied the report of Forensic Laboratory and claimed that the police had taken the truck in their possession without sealing the same and that fictitious evidence has been prepared in collusion with the informant. He denied the original number of the truck being UPG 2244 and his getting it replaced by another registration number and claimed that the number of the recovered truck had never been UPG 2244. Asked about Truck No. UPG 2244 having been sold by him to Sangam Finance Company on 3-6-1977 by writing, Ex. Ka-2, he made a denial and even denied his signatures on it. He also denied the prosecution evidence about Ex. Ka-3 and Ex. Ka-4 transfer papers executed by him in favour of Sangam Finance Company about the truck. He also made denial that the disputed truck was sold to Karimullah informant on 27-7-1977. ( 7 ) IN his defence accused-respondent led oral evidence of Daya Shankar Mishra, Clerk in the R. T. O. Office, D. W. 1, to show that Truck No. UTN 6168 was registered and that the fitness certificate about this truck was in his favour and that Road Tax has been deposited in his name on 18-1-1978 for the period 18-1-1978 to 31-3-1978 through Ex.
Kha-3 and that after registration Rs. 260. 00 have also been deposited by him as tax in his name vide Ex. Kha-4 in respect of this truck No. UTN 6168, but these documents had not been duly proved by this witness, nor were the sale letter and auction letter that were relied upon by the accused-respondent legally proved. Then in Ex. Kha-4 there was overwriting in the chassis number. The witness admitted that before the registration of the truck in the name of accused-respondent it was not registered in the name of anybody. The accused did not examine Prem Kabari from whom he claimed to have purchased the truck. ( 8 ) SHIV Muni Rai D. W. 2, Godown Keeper of U. P. Co-operative Federation Ltd. testified that on 19-11-1977 fertiliser was sent from the Federation to Mirzapur by Truck No. UPG 2244 through truck driver Vasdev, its challan being Ex. Kha-5 He claimed that Karimullah informant was present. Mithai Lal DW 3 testified to transport of fertilizer by Truck No. UPG 2244 on 19-11-77. But he did not testify that the informant Karimullah was a party to this transaction. The accused-respondent also examined Narain Yadav, D. W. 4, who said that he gave finance of Rs. 12000. 00 to him for Truck No. UTN 6168. ( 9 ) THE learned trial Court held after discussion of oral and documentary evidence on record that Truck No. UPG 2244 was sold by Siya Ram accused-respondent and one Gulam Rasool to Sangam Finance Co. on 3-6-77, that the same truck was sold by Sangam Finance Co. to the informant Karimullah under hire-purchase agreement on 27-7-77 and that the transfer of registration was also made in the R. T. O. Office in favour of Karimullah informant as owner. He also held that though it appears that Truck No. UTN 6168 was registered in the name of the accused-respondent Siya Ram and that its tax has also been deposited, its documents were not proved according to law.
He also held that though it appears that Truck No. UTN 6168 was registered in the name of the accused-respondent Siya Ram and that its tax has also been deposited, its documents were not proved according to law. He further held that it was not proved whether Prem Kabari had purchased the truck in disposal, whether Prem Kabari was owner of the truck before its registration in the name of the accused-respondent, that it was also not proved from where the accused-respondent purchased the truck and when that it is also not proved that this truck belonged to the person from whom he claimed to have purchased the same. He also placed on record that the sale letter and auction letter in respect of the truck had not been legally proved. He further held that some how the accused-respondent had managed to get the registration certificate from the R. T. O. office, that the accused-respondent had failed to prove that in reality there was any truck No. UTN 6168 which he had purchased from Prem Kabari and that it has also not been proved that he (the accused respondent) was the owner of the truck. He observed that merely by obtaining the registration certificate by one way or the other, the accused cannot be said to be its owner. He further held that it is almost certain that there was never in existence any vehicle UTN 6168. He further held that the truck was not allowed to be tampered with while in police custody and accepted the evidence of Dr. Gopal Dutta Mishra of Forensic Laboratory, Lucknow and held that No. UTN 6168 was a fictitious registration number and its present Chassis No. 3420025600834 was fictitious and that its real Chassis No. is 3420029608219 which related to Truck No. UPG 2244 whose owner was informant Karimullah. He gave a categorical finding that Truck No. UTN 6168 is the same truck which was UPG 2244 and that the informant Karimullah is its owner and its Chassis number has been tampered with by the accused-respondent and that in this way somehow he managed to obtain its registration number UTN 6168. He further held that Truck No. UPG 2244 originally belonged to Siya Ram accused-respondent who sold it to Sangam Finance Co. on 3-6-1977 and that Sangam Finance Co. sold it to informant Karimullah on 27-7-1977.
He further held that Truck No. UPG 2244 originally belonged to Siya Ram accused-respondent who sold it to Sangam Finance Co. on 3-6-1977 and that Sangam Finance Co. sold it to informant Karimullah on 27-7-1977. However, he went a step further and held that from the evidence on record, it is revealed that the accused-respondent Siya Ram never gave the actual physical possession over the truck to Sangam Finance Co. , nor Sangam Financer Co. ever gave its actual physical possession to the informant Karimullah. His further conclusion was that consequently there was no question of the truck having been given by the informant Karimullah to the accused-respondent for driving it to the workshop of Gama mechanic for repair. He consequently rejected the evidence about entrustment. He also made an observation in his judgment that when the accused-respondent Siya Ram realised that from legal angle the transfer of Truck No. UPG 2244 could be recognised (as valid according to law), he decided to get its chassis number changed and got its new fictitious registration done as number UTN 6168. He further observed that the informant Karimullah instead of going to the Civil Court for obtaining the possession of Truck No. UPG 2244 tried to obtain its possession by taking the shelter of Criminal Courts. He held that this matter was of civil nature and the proper competent Court was the Civil Court for passing the orders about the return of the truck. He also observed that Truck No. UTN 6168 was ultimately deposited by the accused-respondent at P. S. Chopan and consequently held that this truck will be (deemed to be) in his possession and consequently it will remain in his possession and that the informant Karimullah is free to move the competent Civil Court for obtaining the possession of the truck and consequently he acquitted the accused-respondent of the offences under Sections 406/420 I. P. C. and ordered that the Truck No. UTN 6168 will remain in possession of the accused-respondent Siya Ram. ( 10 ) THE present appeal is preferred by the State of U. P. ( 11 ) NOW it is settled law that in the case of appeals against acquittal, the High Court 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.
However, in exercising the powers in this regard the High Court is normally reluctant to interfere with the findings of fact arrived at by the trial Judge and would not interfere if two conclusions could be based on the evidence on record and if the view taken by the trial Court for acquitting the accused is not unreasonable, occasion for the reversal of that view would not arise. However, where the appraisal of evidence made by the trial Judge was unreasonable and perverse or there were glaring infirmities in the judgment of the Court below resulting in gross miscarriage of justice, where the view of the evidence taken by the trial Court was manifestly erroneous and reasons utterly unsustainable, interference by this Court is warranted. ( 12 ) THE present is one such case where the High Court sitting in appeal has no option but to interfere with the judgment of acquittal by the Court below. ( 13 ) THE prosecution has founded on the findings of the Court below that the Truck No. UPG 2244 was sold by the accused-respondent Siya Ram (and Gulam Rasool) to the Sangam Finance Co. on 3-6-77 and that the same truck was sold by the Finance Co. to the informant Karimullah on 27-7-1977 and that there was proper entry of transfer of ownership recorded in the records of the R. T. O. in favour of the informant Karimullah which were in favour of the prosecution and these findings were based on proper appreciation of evidence. The prosecution further relied on the findings of the (Court) below that the registration No. UTN 6168 was fictitious registration and that its present Chassis number was fictitious, that its real chassis number was the one which corresponded to Truck No. UPG 2244 whose owner was Karimullah informant and that vehicle No. UTN 6168 was the same truck which was UPG 2244 and that the informant Karimullah was its owner whose chassis number was changed by the accused-respondent who somehow managed to obtain its registration No. UTN 6168. These findings too are based on proper appreciation of evidence. The learned Magistrate has found that during the period the seized truck was in police custody nobody was allowed to tamper with it and there is no reason to interfere with his finding.
These findings too are based on proper appreciation of evidence. The learned Magistrate has found that during the period the seized truck was in police custody nobody was allowed to tamper with it and there is no reason to interfere with his finding. There was also no reason to doubt the report of the forensic expert about the tampering with the chassis number and the Magistrate was also right in holding that the tampering was done by the accused-respondent who some how managed to obtain a new registration of the same truck with new truck number. ( 14 ) THE learned Addl. Govt. Advocate has challenged the finding of the learned Magistrate that while the accused-respondent had sold the truck to Sangam Finance Company on 3-6-1977, he never transferred the possession of the truck to Sangam Finance Company and that though the Sangam Finance Co. transferred the truck in its turn to the informant Karimullah its possession never passed to the informant Karimullah and that the possession remained all alongwith him (accused-respondent ). The learned Addl. Govt. Advocate contended that the defence case throughout having been a denial of the sale of the truck by him (accused-respondent) and Gulam Rasool to the Finance Co. and also a denial of the transfer by the Finance Co. to informant Karimullah and he having claimed that he has purchased the Truck No. UTN 6168 from Prem Kabari, that Prem Kabari has purchased it in disposal and that this Truck No. UTN 6168 was never Truck No. UPG 2244 and having never claimed that the transfer was made as set up by the prosecution but the possession remained with him (the accused-respondent) it was not open for the trial Court to make out a new case in favour of the accused-respondent and held that though he (the accused-respondent Siya Ram) transferred the Truck No. UPG 2244 to Sangam Finance Co. on 3-6-1977 and the Finance Co. transferred it to the informant Karimullah on 27-7-1977, the evidence disclosed that the accused-respondent Siya Ram never transferred the actual physical possession of the truck to the Sangam Finance Co. and that the Sangam Finance Co. never transferred the actual physical possession to informant Karimullah.
on 3-6-1977 and the Finance Co. transferred it to the informant Karimullah on 27-7-1977, the evidence disclosed that the accused-respondent Siya Ram never transferred the actual physical possession of the truck to the Sangam Finance Co. and that the Sangam Finance Co. never transferred the actual physical possession to informant Karimullah. We have already noted that the trial Court has made categorical observation that the accused-respondent Siya Ram thinking that the transfer of the Truck No. UPG 2244 may be valid from legal point of view, he changed the chassis number and got fictitious registration of the Truck done by way of UTN 6168. The contention of the learned Addl. Govt. Advocate was well founded and merited acceptance. The learned counsel for the accused-respondent has supported the view taken by the learned Magistrate on this point, but it is difficult to sustain the view of the Magistrate on this point. ( 15 ) THE learned Magistrate had placed reliance on certain circumstances to come to the conclusion that the possession of the truck throughout remained with the accused-respondent. One circumstance set up was that on the own showing of the informant from the date of purchase (27-7-1977) to the date of the alleged entrustment of the truck (10-10-1977) he (the informant) kept the truck standing on his door and never used it for transport. Another circumstances relied upon was that before the date 10-10-1977 Siya Ram accused-respondent was never the driver of the truck. Yet another circumstance relied upon was that Nandi (PW 2) was informants acquaintance and well wisher and so an interested witness. The learned Magistrate took the view that the presence of this witness at his (informants) door on 10-10-1977 at the time of the entrustment was doubtful. Yet another circumstance relied upon was the inordinate delay made by the informant in lodging the F. I. R. at the police station. Another circumstance relied upon was that the informant himself admitted in his cross-examination that the Finance Co. has obtained his (informants) signature on blank papers, in middle on first paper and at bottom on others and that it is a practice of the financers to obtain signatures in this manner. He read this statement in conjunction with the statement of the accused-respondent under Section 313 Cr. P. C. that the financers always take signatures on blank papers and misuse the same.
He read this statement in conjunction with the statement of the accused-respondent under Section 313 Cr. P. C. that the financers always take signatures on blank papers and misuse the same. Even at the cost of repetition it has to be stated here that in statement of Section 340 Cr. P. C. the accused-respondent did not go beyond making a denial of the prosecution case and that even in his statement under Section 313 Cr. P. C. he did not make any claim that the sale deed by which the prosecution claims he (Siya Ram accused-respondent) and Gulam Rasool had sold the truck No. UPG 2244 to the Sangam Finance Co. was not duly executed by him and that he had only given his signatures on blank papers and that no possession had been transferred but denied the transfer outright,nor did he claim in this statement that though the said Finance Co. executed sale document of the truck in favour of the informant Karimullah, the possession was never transferred to Karimullah. Furthermore, the plea of continuity of possession imagined and evolved by the learned Magistrate for helping out the accused-respondent in this case was wholly inconsistent with the plea of the accused that the truck which was deposited in the police station was another truck with number UTN 6168 which he had purchased from Prem Kabari who had earlier purchased it in a disposal transaction and that he had obtained registration of the truck in his own name from the R. T. O. In fact the accused led defence evidence to prove this plea. If these documents of title and registration set up by the defence were genuine and the seized truck was a different one, then where was the question of the accused-respondent being owner in possession of the Truck No. UPG 2244. The fact is that he never claimed that he was the owner of the Truck No. UPG 2244. Once these pleas taken by the accused-respondent were rejected by the Magistrate on discussion of the evidence and circumstances the fate of the accused was sealed and there was no escape for him from the prosecution case. The prosecution case was that he was put in possession of the truck by way of entrustment for being taken to the mechanic for repair and the defence claimed that the truck seized was a different truck which belonged to him.
The prosecution case was that he was put in possession of the truck by way of entrustment for being taken to the mechanic for repair and the defence claimed that the truck seized was a different truck which belonged to him. Once it was found that the truck was the same which was sold by the Finance Co. to the informant, there was no defence version left as to how this truck came to be in possession of the accused-respondent. The circumstance that he made a false denial even of the registration and title of Truck No. UPG 2244 and the transfer by him and Gulam Rasool to the Sangam Finance Co. and the further circumstances that he tampered with the chassis number of the truck and got its registration done in the R. T. O. office with a different registration number are material circumstances which go to corroborate the evidence of the informant Karimullah P. W. 8 and the evidence Nandi P. W. 2 about the entrustment of the truck by the informant Karimullah to the accused-respondent. ( 16 ) THE learned Magistrate had absolutely no justification for discarding the evidence of Nandi P. W. 2 about the entrustment of the truck. Interested testimony is not necessarily false. Once it is corroborated by the material circumstances, it could be safely believed. Even if we were to ignore the testimony of this witness Nandi P. W. 2, the evidence of the informant Karimullah itself on the point was fit to be believed and there was no occasion or ground to reject his testimony on the point. It is immaterial that after the purchase the informant did not ply the truck on the road for profit for months together. There could be various reasons for the same. If the learned Magistrate wanted to place reliance on this circumstance, he should have asked Karimullah the reason for not plying the truck during the said period. Often, trucks are kept by the owner off the road for one reason or the other. It cannot be said that such conduct on the part of the owner was improbable so that the Magistrate could justly reject his evidence that he took the truck to his house and kept it there.
Often, trucks are kept by the owner off the road for one reason or the other. It cannot be said that such conduct on the part of the owner was improbable so that the Magistrate could justly reject his evidence that he took the truck to his house and kept it there. Particularly when as noted above the accused denied that the truck which was seized in this case was not the same as the one which the Finance Co. claimed to have sold to the informant, it was not open to the learned Magistrate to take the inaction of the informant Karimullah about plying of the truck for profit as leading to the inference that he was never in possession of the truck purchased by him, nor could the delay made by the informant Karimullah in lodging the F. I. R. be legitimately used as a circumstance to discard the prosecution story of the entrustment of the truck in question which was purchased by Karimullah informant from the Sangam Finance Co. This delay in lodging the F. I. R. consisted of two periods; one was from the date of entrustment till the date of discovery of the truck with the accused-respondent. The second period was from the date of discovery to the date of lodging the F. I. R. The date of entrustment was 10-10-1977. The discovery of the truck was made by the informant on 22-2-1978. The F. I. R. dated 27-2-1978 was addressed to the S. S. P. and the F. I. R. was recorded on 28-2-1978. If the informant Karimullah did not lodge the FIR with the police immediately after coming to know that the truck did not reach the workshop of Gama mechanic, it did not follow that this delay was because he has never got the possession of the truck and had never entrusted it to the accused-respondent. There is documentary evidence on record about the hire purchase agreement between him and the Sangam Finance Co. It cannot be said that the hirer in a hire purchase agreement would make payment from time to time simply for the fun of it without obtaining the actual physical possession of the truck. If the informant kept on searching for the truck and did not lodge the FIR immediately.
It cannot be said that the hirer in a hire purchase agreement would make payment from time to time simply for the fun of it without obtaining the actual physical possession of the truck. If the informant kept on searching for the truck and did not lodge the FIR immediately. there was nothing suspicious about it having regard to the casual manner in which the police normally treats FIRs about such offences. The fact that the informant kept on searching for the truck and ultimately succeeded in locating it rather showed the genuineness of the transaction of hire purchase with him. The time gap between the discovery of the truck and the lodging of the FIR has also been sufficiently explained by him. It was natural for him to contact the Finance Co. with whom there was his hire purchase agreement about the truck. In any case, there was no justification for discarding the prosecution case due to the delay in lodging the prosecution FIR. In the circumstances of this case it was also wholly immaterial that the informant did not lead evidence to show that the accused-respondent had acted as his driver at any time prior to the date of the alleged entrustment. Here it may be noted that the accused-respondent did not dispute at the trial that he knew driving. ( 17 ) WE have noted the conjecture made by the learned Magistrate as to why the accused-respondent had got a fictitious registration of the same vehicle done as UTN 6168 after changing the chassis number. What was in the mind of the accused was not for the Magistrate to conjecture, nor was it open for him to make out a new case for the benefit of the accused. In a criminal trial, it may be open to the accused to take alternative pleas or even pleas which are mutually inconsistent with each other and the magistrate has to consider these pleas to see for what they are worth but the magistrate cannot conjecture and make out a case which was never taken by the accused at the trial. ( 18 ) WE have mentioned earlier about the evidence of Sri Shiv Muni Rai, Godown Keeper (DW 2) and Sri Mithai Lal, Thekedar (DW 3) about the transport of fertilizer from U. P. Cooperative Federation Ltd. on 19-11-1977 to Mirzapur by Truck No. UPG 2244.
( 18 ) WE have mentioned earlier about the evidence of Sri Shiv Muni Rai, Godown Keeper (DW 2) and Sri Mithai Lal, Thekedar (DW 3) about the transport of fertilizer from U. P. Cooperative Federation Ltd. on 19-11-1977 to Mirzapur by Truck No. UPG 2244. Apparently, the evidence of these two witnesses has been led by the defence to show that Karimullah informant was independently plying Truck No. UPG 2244 even on 19-11-77. Shiv Muni Rai (DW 2) has filed Ex. Kha-5, a challan in respect of the transport of the fertilizer by this truck on 19-11-77 driven by Basudeo driver and testified that at the time of preparation of challan, Ex. Kha-5, informant Karimullah was personanlly present. He stated that he saw Karimullah on 19-11-77 for the first time and then saw him on the date of his evidence in Court and at no other time. The original challan has not been filed. Ex. Kha-5 purported to be an attested true copy of the original challan in the challan book and Ex. Kha-6 purports to be a certificate given by this witness about it on behalf of the Federation but these documents did not contain any reference to name or signatures of Karimullah informant. In the cross-examination of Shiv Muni Rai there appears to be mis-recording that the original of Ex. Kha-5 contains the signatures of Karimullah. The true copy does not purport to show this. He has admitted that in the challan form the columns in respect of the name and signature of the officer incharge of Federation have not been filled but are blank. He has also admitted that he did not get the signature of the truck driver done on the challan. The prosecution suggestion to this witness that in collusion with the accused a fictitious document was prepared in the challan book on its last challan form appears to be true. It is significant to note that there is no documentary material brought on record on the defence side to show that any payment of the hire charges of the truck for this fertilizer was made to Karimullah informant. Mithai Lal (DW 3), claiming to be a Thekedar, stated that the said truck (UPG 2244) was brought by Basudeo Driver and another person. He claimed that payment of Rs. 90.
Mithai Lal (DW 3), claiming to be a Thekedar, stated that the said truck (UPG 2244) was brought by Basudeo Driver and another person. He claimed that payment of Rs. 90. 00 hire charges was made to Basudeo driver but Basudeo driver has not been produced in the witness-box, nor any document of this payment has been filed. This witness Mithai Lal has not been shown to be Thekedar of the Federation. Apparently, his evidence about transport of fertilizer belonging to the Federation was a got up one. Further he did not claim the presence of Karimullah informant at the time of the alleged hire of the said truck on the alleged date and for this reason his evidence is in any case of no significance. The eviction of Shiv Muni Rai (DW 2) that he saw Karimullah present with the truck on the date of alleged hire of the truck for transport of fertilizer i. e. 19-11-77, is obviously false and concocted. It is significant that in his statement under Section 313 Cr. P. C. the accused did not make any claim that the informant had been plying truck No. UPG 224 4/11/1977 much less that the informant was having this truck with him even after that. We have already upheld the finding of the magistrate that truck No. UTN 6168 was the same as truck No. UPG 2244. The accused did not show how the truck came to him from the informant. ( 19 ) IF we take that fertilizer was carried by Basudeo driver in truck No. UPG 2244 taking Ex. Kha-5 and Ex. Kha-6 on their face value it is consistent with the prosecution case that the said truck was entrusted to the respondent on 10-10-77 and that he (accused-respondent) committed breach of trust and misappropriated the truck. Ex. Kha-5 and Ex Kha-6 read together only show that uptil then the original registration number was being used and that the tampering in the chassis number had not yet been done. There could be no way for the informant to know as to in what manner the truck was used by the accused from time to time after its misappropriation in breach of trust. The evidence of Roop Narain (DW 4) about the financing of Rs. 12,000. 00 to accused-respondent is in no way inconsistant with the prosecution case.
There could be no way for the informant to know as to in what manner the truck was used by the accused from time to time after its misappropriation in breach of trust. The evidence of Roop Narain (DW 4) about the financing of Rs. 12,000. 00 to accused-respondent is in no way inconsistant with the prosecution case. The accused could have taken the said loan from this witness after getting the registration of the truck done under the fictitious registration No. UTN 6168. ( 20 ) IN view of the above discussion the findings of the learned magistrate that the possession of the truck was never transferred by Siya Ram accused-respondent and Gulam Rasool to the Finance Co. and that the Finance Co. did not transfer the possession of the truck to the informant Karimullah cannot be sustained and are set aside. The finding of the learned magistrate rejecting the evidence of entrustment is also set aside and it is held on reappraisal of evidence and circumstances on record that Truck No. UPG 2244 was entrusted by the informant to the accused-respondent Siya Ram on 10-10-77 for being taken to Gama mechanic for repair and that he instead of taking it there dishonestly misappropriated it and converted it into his own use and with that end in view tampered with its chassis number and managed to get its registration done under a new fictitious number. Consequently the offence under Section 406 IPC has been made out. ( 21 ) IT is true that under a hire purchase agreement of the truck the transfer of title takes place in accordance with the terms and conditions of the agreement. The terms and conditions are not before us but the material on record showed that payments were made by the informant from time to time to the Finance Co. and that the Finance Company had executed the hire purchase document in favour of the informant and delivered the possession to him and moved the Regional Transport Officer and got his name registered in its records as the owner of the truck.
and that the Finance Company had executed the hire purchase document in favour of the informant and delivered the possession to him and moved the Regional Transport Officer and got his name registered in its records as the owner of the truck. So the informant could legally make an entrustment of the truck the violation of the terms of which would constitute the offence under Section 406 I. P. C. Here, it will be useful to refer to the following observation of the Apex Court in the authority Som Nath Puri v. State of Rajasthan, AIR 1972 Supreme Court 1490, 1972 Cri LJ 897 at page 1493; of AIR. "section 405 I. P. C. does not provide that the entrustment of property should be by someone or the amount received must be the property of the person on whose behalf it is received. As long as the accused is given possession of property for a specific purpose or to deal with it in a particular manner, the ownership being in some person other than the accused, he can be said to be entrusted with that property to be applied in accordance with the terms of entrustment and for the benefit of the owner. The expression entrusted in S. 409 is used in a wide sense and includes all cases in which property is voluntarily handed over for a specific purpose and is dishonestly disposed of contrary to the terms on which possession has been handed over. . . . " ( 22 ) SO far as the offence under Section 420 IPC is concerned, I am afraid that its ingredients are not established in this case and consequently the acquittal of the accused-respondent for the offence under Section 420 IPC will have to be sustained. ( 23 ) COMING to the question of sentence, in my view, the sentence of R. I. for a period of 4 years will serve the ends of justice in this case. ( 24 ) IT may be mentioned here that after the delivery of the judgment by it the trial Court passed orders under Section 452 (2) Cr. P. C. in favour of the accused-respondent. It also appears that after it the truck was delivered to the accused-respondent by the police.
( 24 ) IT may be mentioned here that after the delivery of the judgment by it the trial Court passed orders under Section 452 (2) Cr. P. C. in favour of the accused-respondent. It also appears that after it the truck was delivered to the accused-respondent by the police. It further appears that the order about the release of the truck in favour of the accused-respondent was challenged before the Sessions Judge under Section 454 Cr. P. C. on 6-10-1979 who stayed the operation of the order passed by the magistrate under Section 454 (2) Cr. P. C. and the truck was directed to be attached by the police and kept in safe custody and that thereafter the said appeal was allowed by the Sessions Judge on 31-10-1979 and the truck was ordered to be delivered to Karimullah informant on certain terms and conditions. This order was challenged before the High Court in Revision No. 1755 of 1979. The said revision was admitted and the stay order was granted. ( 25 ) FOR the reasons aforesaid, the Government Appeal is partly allowed. The findings of the learned Magistrate are set aside to the extent noted above. The order of acquittal for the offence under Section 420 I. P. C. is maintained. However, the order of acquittal of the accused-respondent Siya Ram alias Khurbur for the offence under Section 406 IPC is set aside and he is found guilty of the offence under Section 406 IPC and is convicted accordingly and sentenced to undergo R. I. for a period of 4 years. Regarding the custody of the truck in question Criminal Revision No. 1755 of 1979 is pending before the High Court, wherein the prosecution may bring this judgment and order to the notice of the Court. ( 26 ) THE accused-respondent is on bail from this Court. His bail is cancelled. Let the Chief Judicial Magistrate, Mirzapur get him arrested forthwith and consigned to the District Jail, Mirzapur to serve out his sentence according to law. ( 27 ) LET a certified copy of this judgment be sent at once to the Sessions Judge, Mirzapur for information and compliance. The compliance report shall be submitted to this Court by the Sessions Judge, Mirzapur and the Chief Judicial Magistrate, Mirzapur within a month from today. Order accordingly. .