KUNDAN SINGH, J. ( 1 ) THIS appeal has been preferred by the appellants Mukut Singh, Ram Kumar and Sri Pal Singh against the judgment and order dated 22-5-1979 passed by Sri Sachidanand, Sessions Judge, Shahjahanpur, whereby he convicted and sentenced each of them under Sec. 302/34 and Sec. 201/34, I. P. C. to life imprisonment and 7 years rigorous imprisonment, respectively, in Sessions Trial No. 580 of 1978 making both the sentences to run concurrently. ( 2 ) THE prosecution case, in brief, is that Lakhan, uncle of Mukandey Gadariya, resident of village Sikanderpur Kalan within police station Jalalabad, district Shajhahanpur was abducted by Sripal Singh, Mukut Singh appellants and Jhinguri and others and got a sale deed of his land executed from him forcibly in favour of the wife of Sripal Singh and Jhinguri. When the incident of abduction was reported to the police, Mukandey and others were challaned under Sec. 107, C. P. C. Mukandey filed a criminal complaint against Sripal Singh, Mukut Singh and others. Later on Lakhan Singh was murdered. Mukandey applied for mutation of his name on the land of Lakhan Singh, which was allowed. ( 3 ) ON the fateful day, i. e. 15-7-78, Vidyaram, son of Mukandey saw the accused persons ploughing the field of Lakhan in the morning. He cried to his father Mukandey whereupon both his father and mother rushed to the spot and protested the action of the accused, who took away their plough threatening the doom of the family of Mukandey. On the same day at about noon Vidyaram, aged about 17 years, son of Mukandey was grazing his bullocks near a cattle pond at a distance of 11/2 furlongs from the village abadi. The accused persons reached there. At that time Sripal Singh was carrying a gun, while Mukut Singh and Ram Kumar were having lathis. Accused Ram Kumar caught hold the boy Vidyaram and dashed him on the ground with the help of co-accused Mukut Singh and pressed the lathi on his throat. Another boy Mathuri, aged about 14 years, son of Sheobaran Kahar, who was also grazing his cattle in the nearby field, threatened to report the matter in the village. Mukut Singh thereupon caught hold Mathuri also and dashed him on the ground and like Vidhyaram lathi was pressed on his throat as well.
Another boy Mathuri, aged about 14 years, son of Sheobaran Kahar, who was also grazing his cattle in the nearby field, threatened to report the matter in the village. Mukut Singh thereupon caught hold Mathuri also and dashed him on the ground and like Vidhyaram lathi was pressed on his throat as well. When both the boys died, their dead bodies were thrown in the cattle pond and thereafter the accused persons had run away from the venue. In that context it may also be mentioned that on hearing the hue and cries of Vidyaram, Bachchoo (PW-1) and Gaya Prasad (PW-4), a boy of ten years of age, who were also present in the vicinity of venue, attracted to the place of occurrence. They witnessed the incident. Gaya Prasad, being a child, was so daunted that he went in hide in a sugarcane field. When the atmosphere was calm he came out a hide and ran away to his house, while Bachchoo came to the house of Mukandey and informed him of the happenings. Mukandey and others rushed to the spot. They took the dead bodies out of the pond and kept them on a mat on the bank of the pond. Lukai Gadariya, who was present at the house of Mukandey when the information was conveyed by Bachchoo about the unfortunate incident, also reached the pond and helped Mukandey and others in taking out the dead bodies from the pond. Mukandey instructed Lukai to go to the police station and inform the police about the incident. When Lukai was going to the police Station at a distance of about 1 or 2 furlongs from the village he came across with Jhinguri, who warned him not to name the accused persons as assailants else he would also meet the same fate which the boys have met.
When Lukai was going to the police Station at a distance of about 1 or 2 furlongs from the village he came across with Jhinguri, who warned him not to name the accused persons as assailants else he would also meet the same fate which the boys have met. Jhinguri reached the police station Jalalabad where he found Kanhai Singh, father of accused Ram Kumar, sitting with the Sub Inspector, Lukai, who was already frightened due to the threat extended by Jhinguri in the way, was further terrorised to see Kanhai Singh with the Sub Inspector and consequently rather naming the accused he only informed the Sub Inspector that two children, namely Vidya Ram, aged about 18 years, son of Mukandey Gadariya and Mathuri aged about 15-16 years, son of Sheobaran Kahar have drowned in the cattle pond at about 12 noon and their dead bodies have been taken out of the pond by the villagers and are lying on the bank of the pond. That information was taken down in the G. D. No. 28, the same day, i. e. 15-7-78 at 5. 15 p. m. at the police station, Jalalabad. Balbir Singh Tyagi, Sub Inspector, and some Constables proceeded to village Sikanderpur for preparing the inquest reports etc. From the Thana Lukai also accompanied them up to the village but he did not go to the pond where the dead bodies were lying and the police was going to see the spot. On reaching the pond, the Sub Inspector Balbir Singh Tyagi prepared the inquest reports of the dead bodies of Mathuri and Vidyaram at 9. 00 p. m. and 11. 05 p. m. on the same day. According to the Sub Inspector and in the opinion of panches the cause of death of Mathuri, as noted in the inquest report, was due to injury on the mouth and drowning and the body appears to have been thrown in the pond after causing the injury. Regarding the cause of death of Vidyaram the Sub Inspector and the Panches were of the opinion that the death was due to drowning and no injury was noted on his person in the inquest report. Thereafter the Sub Inspector sent the dead bodies in a sealed condition to District mortuary Shahjahanpur for autopsy. ( 4 ) DR. Akilesh Prasad Misra (PW-7) conducted post-mortem examination on the dead bodies.
Thereafter the Sub Inspector sent the dead bodies in a sealed condition to District mortuary Shahjahanpur for autopsy. ( 4 ) DR. Akilesh Prasad Misra (PW-7) conducted post-mortem examination on the dead bodies. He found two contusions and one bruise on the dead body of Vidyaram and the larynx was fractured and trache congested, while on the dead body of Mathuri multiple bruises and multiple abrasions were present and both larynx and trachea were fractured. In the opinion of the Doctor, the cause of death of both the boys was asphyxia due to ante mortem injury No. 1 on both the bodies. ( 5 ) THE investigation of the case was entrusted to Sub Inspector Inderpal Singh, who only prepared the site plan of the place of occurrence, and thereafter the investigation was transferred to Sub Inspector Tejvir Singh Chauhan (PW-8) on 20-7-78, who recorded the statement of Mukandey the same day. Subsequently on 23-7-78 and 5-9-78 he also recorded the statements of Bachchoo and Gaya Prasad, respectively, and after completing the investigation and other formalities submitted charge sheet in Court against the accused-appellants. ( 6 ) THE prosecution examined 8 witnesses in all. Out of them, Bachchoo (PW-1) and Gaya Prasad (PW-4) are eye witnesses of the incident. Balbir Singh Tyagi, Sub Inspector (PW-2) had prepared the inquest reports while Amar Singh Constable (PW-3) had brought the dead bodies and relevant papers to the mortuary. Lukai (PW-5) is the person who gave information to the police of the incident, while Mukandey (PW-6) is the father of ill-starred boy Vidhyaram. Dr. A. P. Misra (PW-7) had conducted autopsy on the dead bodies while Rajvir Singh Chauhan (PW-8) had completed the investigation and submitted charge sheet in Court against the accused-appellants. ( 7 ) IN their statements recorded under Section 313, Cr. P. C. the accused-appellants have denied the prosecution case. Sripal Singh deposed that he did not extend any threat and also denied abduction of Lakhan. According to him, he has been falsely implicated due to enmity as he was a witness against the complainant party in a case under Sec. 107/117 Cr. P. C. and further Mukandey had already filed a complaint against him for his prosecution. ( 8 ) ACCUSED Ram Kumar stated that he is a relation of Sripal.
According to him, he has been falsely implicated due to enmity as he was a witness against the complainant party in a case under Sec. 107/117 Cr. P. C. and further Mukandey had already filed a complaint against him for his prosecution. ( 8 ) ACCUSED Ram Kumar stated that he is a relation of Sripal. Sripal and Jhinguri got a Sale deed executed from Lakhan and due to that enmity he has also been roped in the above case falsely. Accused Mukut Singh also gave same statement and reason for his false implication as was ascribed by Sripal Singh. ( 9 ) THE learned Sessions Judge after examining the evidence on record held the appellants guilty of the offences under Sections 302/34 and 201/34, I. P. C. and he convicted and sentenced them as aforesaid. ( 10 ) THE learned counsel for the appellants has made three-fold submissions in support of this appeal. Firstly, he contended that the presence of eye witnesses at the scene of occurrence was highly doubtful inasmuch as they did not disclose the names of the accused-appellant to police for 8 days. The second submission was that the medical evidence was in conflict with oral evidence and lastly that the witnesses were partisan and on their evidence no verdict of guilt could be returned against the appellants. ( 11 ) REGARDING the first contention the learned counsel for the appellants submitted that the witnesses had not disclosed the name of the accused persons for about a week and their conduct was unnatural and suspicious. The explanation offered for non-disclosure of the name was unbelievable. In support of the contention the learned counsel for the appellants relied on the case of, Surinder Singh v. State of Punjab, reported in, 1989 SCC (Cri) 649 and State of Orissa v. Brahmanand Nanda reported in, AIR 1976 SC 2488 : 1976 Cri LJ 1985. ( 12 ) WE have given our anxious thought to the submission made on behalf of the appellants. In the present case Lukai was sent to the police station by Mukandey, father of Vidya Ram for lodging the report in respect of the incident.
( 12 ) WE have given our anxious thought to the submission made on behalf of the appellants. In the present case Lukai was sent to the police station by Mukandey, father of Vidya Ram for lodging the report in respect of the incident. When Lukai was at a distance of one or one and a half furlongs on the way to the police station, he met Jhinguri, who threatened him not to lodge a report against Mukut Singh, Sri Pal Singh and Ramkumar regarding the murder of the two boys by them otherwise he will be dealt with in the same manner. When he reached the Police Station he found Kanhai Singh sitting with the Sub Inspector at the police station and that Kanhai Singh, is father of Ram Kumar accused. Apprehending danger to his life from Jhinguri and Kanhai Singh, he lodged the report at the police station showing that the two boys had died as a result of drowing in the cattle pond. After lodging the report Lukai came with the S. I. to the village, then he came to his house and the S. I. went to the place of occurrence. The S. I. conducted the inquest. Mukandey and Bachchu seeing the action of the police thought that the police was taking legal action and they were under the impression that the FIR had been lodged against the accused persons. After receipt of the post mortem report the police came to the conclusion that it was a case of murder and not that of drowning in the pond. On 20-7-1988 the investigation was transferred to S. I. Tej Vir Singh Chauhan. Then he interrogated the witnesses and it was only then that the name of the accused persons came to light. Mukandey was examined on 20-7-1978 and the statement of Bachchu was recorded on 23-7-1978 u/s. 161 Cr. P. C. The statement of Gaya Prasad was also taken down on 5-9-1978 u/s. 161 Cr. P. C. The prosecution came up with a reasonable and plausible explanation for non-disclosure of the name of the accused persons for five days. The non-disclosure of the name of the accused persons for five days does not affect the veracity of the testimony of the witnesses in the present case in the facts and circumstances stated above.
P. C. The prosecution came up with a reasonable and plausible explanation for non-disclosure of the name of the accused persons for five days. The non-disclosure of the name of the accused persons for five days does not affect the veracity of the testimony of the witnesses in the present case in the facts and circumstances stated above. ( 13 ) GAYA Prasad PW-4 is a boy of ten years of age and he stood the test of cross examination successfully. After seeing the egregious outrageous incident of gruesome murders he was dazed and went to hide in the sugarcane field and after the accused had left the scene of occurrence he came out of the field and ran away to his house where he narrated the incident to his mother. He has given out in his statement the full events of the commission of murders and his statement has been fully corroborated on all material points by another eye witness Bachchu. Being a boy of tender age he was not supposed to have any animus against the appellants and no direct enmity was attributed to him or his family. At the time of incident the witness has admitted the presence of Bachchu (PW-1) also and both of them have given a plausible reason for their presence at the spot in connection with grazing their cattle. Merely because his statement was recorded on 5-9-1978 by the Investigating Officer would not be a ground for holding him as a planted witness. The delay in recording the statement of this witness may be a negligence of the Investigating Officer or for some other reason but for that his intrinsic statement fully corroborated by Bachchu and the ambient circumstances cannot be rejected as false. It was for the I. O. to explain the reason for not recording the statement of Gaya Prasad promptly as soon as he got information regarding his presence at the place of incident. A question was sought to be put to the I. O. while in the witness box on this point by the learned defence counsel but that was turned down by the learned Sessions Judge.
A question was sought to be put to the I. O. while in the witness box on this point by the learned defence counsel but that was turned down by the learned Sessions Judge. Therefore the statement of Gaya Prasad (PW-4) who otherwise was not interested to falsely implicate the appellants that on the fateful day he was grazing his cattle in the nearby fields and he had witnessed the incident of commission of murder of two innocent boys at the hands of the accused appellants inspires confidence. ( 14 ) NOW turning to another witness Bachchu (PW-1) the learned counsel for the appellants has assailed his testimony on the ground that if, indeed, he had disclosed the names of the culprits to the father of deceased Vidyaram at his house in the presence of Lukai, the maker of the report, there was no occasion for the latter for not naming the appellant as accused before the Sub Inspector at the Police Station where he had gone to convey the information of the incident as per the instructions of Mukandey. In this regard it would be necessary to sift and sieve his evidence carefully and cautiously. In his statement in Court he has satisfactorily explained the reason for not naming the appellants as felons because in the way Jhinguri had extended threat of life in case he named any of the appellants as assailants and under that duress the witness had made a commitment to him not to name anybody as accused and thereafter the presence of Kanhai Singh, father of Ram Kumar appellant, further awed him. Out of fear, this witness had shifted from his native village to some other village and while he was in witness box the learned defence counsel put a question to him as to why he had left the village and his very intrinsic answer to that question was that the Thakurs of the village do not permit them to live in the village and when they have done away with the boys of tender age, how he could reside in the village.
If his statement as a whole is taken into stock, it leaves no room for doubt that the appellants were in a dominating position in the village and if out of fear he did not disclose the names of the appellants to the Police, his testimony cannot be thrown away as trash on that solitary ground and the prosecution case rejected as false. The statement of Bachchoo eye witness finds full corroboration from the statement of Gaya Prasad, who being a boy of tender age was not supposed to have any sort of enmity with the appellants. The presence of Kanhai Singh at the Thana and that of Jhinguri in the way leading from village to police station Jalalabad speaks of the guilty mind of the accused-appellants. After commis-sion of gruesome murders of two innocent children the accused took every precaution not to be nominated as culprits and this conduct of the appellants heavily weighs against them. Lukhai had accompanied the police from Jalalabad to village Sikanderpur but on their entering the village he had all of a sudden disappeared and did not visit the pond where the bodies were lying till the police stayed in the village. The reason is not far to seek. He was frightened from the resolute Thakurs of the village, namely the appellants, and did not want to invite their wrath by disclosing their names as assailants and just to avoid that ugly situation he had quietly parted with the company of the police. If the appellants were not being proclaimed as perpetrators of the crime and the threats were not extended to Lukai. Lukai must have followed the police party up to the pond. All these circumstances speak of a felony at the hands of the appellant and the argument of the learned counsel for the appellants that the incident was not seen by any body is not much impressive. ( 15 ) IN that context the next submission of the learned counsel for the appellants was that if we take it as granted that Lukai was afraid and out of fear he did not disclose the names of the appellants to the police, then the father of the deceased Vidyaram, namely, Mukandey could have disclosed their names to the police which had come in the village the same day.
In this connection it may be mentioned that Mukandey is Gadariya by caste and is a simpleton rustic villager. The entire family including Mukandey must be wailing and was in grave strain. By presence of the police in the village on information by Lukai as per his instruction, he was supposed to believe that the names of the accused had been disclosed to police by Lukai and on that information the police had come to arrest the culprits and the Daroga who visited the spot was treating it as a case of drowning and in that suspense Mukandey did not disclose the names to the police and the police did not enquire the names of the culprits. If the Sub Inspector had taken signature or thumb impression of Mukandey on the inquest report in which cause of death was noted, it would not mean that Mukandey had knowledge of that endorsement. However, as soon as copy of the postmortem reports was received by the police and ante-mortem injuries were noted in those reports, the police woke up from slumber and started investigating the case seriously and immediately on inquiry by the Investigating Officer Mukandey had disclosed the names of the appellants. Therefore, I am of the considered view that Bachchoo (PW-1) and Gaya Prasad (PW-4) had witnessed the incident and the former had conveyed the news of murders to Mukandey immediately after the commission of the offence where Lukai, maker of the report was also present. All these witnesses have successfully stood the test of cross-examination and minor contradiction in the statements here and there are of no significance when on all material points they have remained unshaken.
All these witnesses have successfully stood the test of cross-examination and minor contradiction in the statements here and there are of no significance when on all material points they have remained unshaken. ( 16 ) THE second limb of the argument of the learned counsel for the appellants was that the incident is said to have taken place at 12 noon and it was unnatural that the boys had not taken their break fast or food by the time the unfortunate incident had occurred inasmuch as according to the postmortem reports the stomach of both the deceased were empty and faecal matter was present in intestines and on the strength of that medical evidence he argued that in all probability the incident had taken place in early hours in the cover of darkness, which was not witnessed by anybody, and hence the eye witness account given by the witnesses was in conflict with the medical evidence. This submission of the learned counsel is misplaced because it is not the case of the prosecution that the deceased had left the house after taking the food or break-fast. Unless there is evidence to that effect, it cannot safely be said that the incident had not taken place at 12 noon as alleged by the prosecution and the oral evidence is not in line with the medical evidence. ( 17 ) NOW adverting to the third and last contention of the learned counsel for the appellant that the witnesses were partisan and hence on their evidence the conviction of the appellants cannot be sustained. In that connection the learned counsel for the appellants took us through the statement of Bachchoo (PW-1) and strenously argued that the family of Kalloo is connected with Bachchoo and Gaya Prasad is son of Kalloo. Bachchoo was an accused with Mukandey in a case under Sec. 107/117 Cr. P. C. Lakhan, uncle of Mukandey, was abducted by the accused and others and they got a sale deed executed from him forcibly. When the matter was reported to police, police challenged Mukandey and others under Section 107, Cr. P. C. Mukandey filed a complaint case against the appellants in which Bachchoo appeared as a witness against the appellants and others. Smt. Biroli, sister of Gaya Prasad witness is married with Rampal, maternal nephew of Bachchoo.
When the matter was reported to police, police challenged Mukandey and others under Section 107, Cr. P. C. Mukandey filed a complaint case against the appellants in which Bachchoo appeared as a witness against the appellants and others. Smt. Biroli, sister of Gaya Prasad witness is married with Rampal, maternal nephew of Bachchoo. Lukai was first cousin of Bachchoo as is apparent from the statement of the latter and he appeared as a witness for Mukandey in the complaint case against Sripal Singh, which was regarding abduction of Lakhan. No doubt the witnesses are connected with each other distantly and some of them had appeared as witnesses against the accused party but the enmity cuts both ways. The incident had taken place in broad day light at 12. 00 noon. It cannot be gainsaid that it was not a case of natural death. Had the assailants been other than the appellants or strangers, other villages could have come forward to depose against them but since the complainant and the accused party were involved in protracted ligitation, no person unconnected with the either party would have liked to appear as a witness for either of them. Bachchoo (PW-1) and Gaya Prasad (PW-4) were grazing their cattle in the vicinity of the place where the incident had occurred and they were not chance witnesses. Irrespective of the fact that they were related remotely to the family of Mukandey, their evidence could be relied upon if they had a reason to be present on the spot and had witnessed the incident. The evidence of such witnesses requires, close scrutiny, and on a careful and cautious vetting, their evidence inspire confidence that the incident had taken place in the manner and at the time and place as alleged by the prosecution. the prosecution has succeeded in bringing home guilt against the appellants and the learned Sessions Judge has rightly recorded their conviction. ( 18 ) ACCORDINGLY, the appeal fails and is hereby dismissed. The conviction and sentences as passed by the learned Sessions Judge is confirmed. The appellants are on bail. They shall be taken into custody to serve out their sentences. Appeal dismissed. .