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2004 DIGILAW 1258 (ALL)

Shiv Prasad son of Tameshwar and Smt. Rampati wife of Shiv Prasad (In Jail) v. State of U. P.

2004-07-12

IMTIYAZ MURTAZA, S.K.AGARWAL

body2004
S. K. AGARWAL AND IMTIYAZ MURTAZA, JJ. ( 1 ) THIS appeal was preferred in this Court by the two appellants Shiv Prasad and Smt. Rampati against their conviction under Section 302 I. P. C. simplicitor and under Section 302 read with section 109 I. P. C. Both of them were sentenced to imprisonment for life under their respective charges. A token fine of Rs. 50/- was also imposed upon both of them and in default of payment of the said fine, they are to undergo rigorous imprisonment for 3 months. Being aggrieved by the said conviction the abovesaid appeal was filed in this Court. ( 2 ) THE occurrence was said to be sequel to illicit intimacy between wife of the deceased Ram kishan with his own friend Shiv Prasad, appellant. They were involved for the last 14-15 years as admitted by the son, P. W. 2, Kishore Kumar Gupta. All the three, the deceased, the appellant shiv Prasad and the son P. W. 2 Kishore Kumar Gupta are employees of the Railways. The deceased was serving as a peon whereas the appellant was a steno in the said department. The unfortunate incident occurred on the night intervening 5th /6th April, 1979, precise time being unknown in village Rajabari near a Nala (drain) flowing about a Furlong away from the village abadi. The dead body was lying in a pit close by the Nala. It was discovered on the next morning at about 7. 00 Oclock by P. W. 1, Pullunath, Pradhan of the said village. The discovery was based on an information that a dead body is lying into the ditch nearby the Nala as earlier said. On receiving the said information, the Pradhan, who was in his field at a distance of half a furlong from Nala rushed to the spot. The identity of the said dead body could not be fixed until 9th when per chance Sub Inspector and the photographer, who drew the photographs on the dead body, met the son on the village path and he was shown the photos. On photos being so shown, he immediately identified it to be of his father. According to the Pradhan the dead body was wearing full Pant and Shirt. An enquiry was made from amongst the member of the crowd in order to find out the identity of the person but to no avail. On photos being so shown, he immediately identified it to be of his father. According to the Pradhan the dead body was wearing full Pant and Shirt. An enquiry was made from amongst the member of the crowd in order to find out the identity of the person but to no avail. A cash of Rs, 26. 95, a prescription bearing name of Ram Kewal and 5 tablets of medicine were recovered from his pocket. The pradhan drew a report and carried it to the police station. It was at a distance of 3l/2 miles. The report was handed over at 9. 30 A. M. It is Ex. Ka. 1. The dead body was left in custody of the village Chowkidar Jaan Mohammad. None was named in the F. I. R. ( 3 ) THE investigation, immediately after completion of the formalities at the police station of check report and other necessary documents, commenced. The Sub Inspector visited the site of occurrence and took the body into his custody. The check report was copied by him in the case diary. The inquest proceedings were commenced after appointing the panchas. Its injuries were seen and noted. He also formed an opinion that death occurred on account of the injuries present on the person, of the deceased. The inquest memo is Ext. Ka. 2. It bears the signatures of some of the witnesses examined during trial as witnesses of different circumstances; It bears a serious significance to the truthfulness of their evidence. The dead body thereafter was despatched to the mortuary for post-mortem. ( 4 ) THE post-mortem on the dead body was conducted by P. W. 4, Dr. N. Swaroop. He found as many as 16 incised wound on person. These injuries were mostly on the vital part of the body which includes forehead, neck, chest and abdomen. Some of these injuries were on the right hand, frontal aspect, lateral and wrists. Humorous in the middle right arm was fractured under the injuries suffered by him. In the opinion of the doctor the death was the result of haemorrhage and shock due to injuries sustained by the victim. Report of the postmortem examination is Ext. Ka. 5. An attempt was made to create some confusion with regard to injury no: 9. Consequently use of two weapons apparently was prompted. In the opinion of the doctor the death was the result of haemorrhage and shock due to injuries sustained by the victim. Report of the postmortem examination is Ext. Ka. 5. An attempt was made to create some confusion with regard to injury no: 9. Consequently use of two weapons apparently was prompted. There is absolutely nothing in the post-mortem which may suggest the wound to be a penetrated wound. Knife itself is a penetrative weapon and is capable of piercing into. Simply because according to Dr. Swaroop the edges have cut on both sides but it was not indicated in the report, no such inference is to be drawn. Therefore, the statement made contrary to the notings in the post-mortem examination report cannot be accepted by the Court. ( 5 ) THE gravamen of the charge of murder against the appellants Shiv Prasad and Smt. Rampati basically rests upon alleged motive. The witnesses for which are P. W. 2, son of the deceased, p. W. 7. Babu Lal, who partially corroborated it and P. W. 8. Foujdar Chaprasi of the school where Smt. Rampati was appearing in the High School examination. Babu Lal is the person who has let out a room to the appellants for their stay there for the month of examination. The second limb of the prosecution evidence is that the deceased was seen in the said school where his wife was appearing in the examination on 5th. As a matter of fact it is not the case that deceased was seen by any one in village Rajabari but evidence to the contrary came from the mouth of P. W. 2, kishore Kumar Gupta, the son. He claimed that his father, the deceased, accompanied his wife appellant Rampati, to the village of the examination. The third circumstance is that the appellant was seen at about 10. 00 P. M. on the day of occurence i. e. 5th of April by P. W. 10 Ram Prati singh. We have examined his evidence very closely. It does not furnish any convincing evidence on the aspect. He did not possess any source of light with him nor there is any statement to the effect that it was a bright moonlit night arid identification of any person in the said light was possible. The victim was coming towards the road. We have examined his evidence very closely. It does not furnish any convincing evidence on the aspect. He did not possess any source of light with him nor there is any statement to the effect that it was a bright moonlit night arid identification of any person in the said light was possible. The victim was coming towards the road. This witness was returning home from his field at this late hour. He claimed to have identified the appellant Shiv Prasad alone at l0. 00 P. M. He did not exchange a single word with him. It is quite unnatural. He did not say that any suspicion crossed his mind on seeing him on the road at that hour. No blood on his clothes was seen by him. Nala was a furlong from where he was seen. In the circumstances, the testimony of this witness is not worth reliance hence we have no hesitation in discarding the circumstance No. 4. ( 6 ) IT is proved prima facie that murder was committed on the alleged spot where the dead body was found in the said pit near the Nala. There is no other evidence with regard to murder having been committed in any other place and the body being abandoned here by the appellants or the appellant Shiv Prasad. Recovery of blood from this very spot alongwith the simple soil proves it. It could not however be established by the prosecution that the blood so recovered was human blood and matched with blood group of the deceased. The latches made by the prosecution in dispatching the blood to the Serologist at Agra for its determination is unhealthy. It was human blood and it belongs particularly to the blood group of the deceased could not be proved because of its disintegration as a consequence. It was despatched after more than 3 1/2 months of its recovery. The recovery was made on 6th April, 1979 and blood was despatched to the Serologist as per P. W. 6 Moti Lal Singh on 26. 7. 1979. This witness is posted in C. M. O. office, Gorakhpur. It was despatched after more than 3 1/2 months of its recovery. The recovery was made on 6th April, 1979 and blood was despatched to the Serologist as per P. W. 6 Moti Lal Singh on 26. 7. 1979. This witness is posted in C. M. O. office, Gorakhpur. ( 7 ) IN view of these anomalies and latches in the prosecution evidence even this piece of evidence is not worth any credence and it failed to connect it with murder or the accused ( 8 ) THE circumstance No. 5 is recovery of a knife and a blood stained Lungi at his pointing out from the house of his father-in-law where as per the evidence of investigating officer, P. W. 14 the weapon and Lungi were concealed in the room of his wife in a box and were handed over after his arrest on 11th April, 9th April was the date when the dead body was identified for the first time as that of Ram Kishan by his own son and the arrest and discovery was effected on the said very date. Surprisingly on 9th April the photographer P. W. 13 Ram Das Singh disclosed the identity of the deceased and his residential address and identified it. Why did he not disclose it to the investigating officer on 5th April itself is a fact that puts this entire evidence into disarray. The statement made by the son in the Court does not conform to these facts of the prosecution with regard to arrest and the discovery. Despite the statement made by the medical officer it could not be connected with the assault upon, the victim prima facie. Moreover, the recovery witnesses have turned hostile and did not support the prosecution case of recovery at the pointing out of the appellant. P. W. 11 and P. W. 12 both have denied these recoveries. Recovered Lungi, stained with blood, was never sent to serologist for any determination of its blood group. Had it tallied with deceaseds blood group it would have been a very strong circumstance of his incrimination in the offence. ( 9 ) SIMILARLY the evidence of injuries upon his person were vainly attempted to connect with the offence. The doctor P. W. 9 M. K. Saxena failed to give out a positive duration of these injuries. Neither the witness who saw him on the road at 10. ( 9 ) SIMILARLY the evidence of injuries upon his person were vainly attempted to connect with the offence. The doctor P. W. 9 M. K. Saxena failed to give out a positive duration of these injuries. Neither the witness who saw him on the road at 10. 00 P. M. disclosed any such presence of blood on his Lungi either to investigating officer or to Court. The injuries, too, fail to connect the appellant reliably with the offence. ( 10 ) IN view of these, the discovery of the weapon and blood stained Lungi at the pointing out of the appellant from his father-in-laws house, which otherwise may have been a very strong piece of evidence, has become useless on account of jugglery perfected by the investigating officer. In this connection some pieces of relevant evidence occurring in the testimony of P. W. 2 require reference. ( 11 ) THE conviction of Smt. Rampati was recorded with the aid of Section 109 I. P. C. The evidence of this witness P. W. 2 must have been recorded for the first time on 9th April. He identified his father from the photograph exhibited to him by the photographer and the Sub inspector. There is no evidence worth the name that the police had ever visited the residence of this witness before that very date. Why has the photographer accompanied investigating officer ? the photos were already collected by the investigating officer from him. He also recorded his evidence before gong to se the son. According to investigating officer, P. W. 14, the identity and place of abode of the deceased was disclosed to him first by this photographer. Thus it is clear that this photographer, P. W. 13, knew from before both the deceased and his son, Why he did not do so on the date when he photographed the dead body if he really knew the two from before is very intriguing. ( 12 ) WE cannot here ignore the fact that a prescription of railway hospital bearing the name Ram kewal was recovered from the person of the deceased on the date of discovery of the dead body and preparation of the inquest this prescription alongwith cash of Rs. 26. 95 both were handed over by the public to the investigating officer. No effort was made by investigating officer to locate this Ram Kewal. 26. 95 both were handed over by the public to the investigating officer. No effort was made by investigating officer to locate this Ram Kewal. How his prescription reached the pocket of Ram Kishun deceased. For nearly 4 days before suddenly becoming so enterprising as to show it to the son of the deceased who too is a railway employee nothing is on the record to show that any serious effort were made to know the whereabouts of the deceased by police. There is also no evidence on the record to show that any effort to locate the identity of the deceased from the prescription was ever made by Sub Inspector. The failure on the part of this railway employee, the son, to report the missing of his father for several days from 5th is yet another lacuna in the prosecution evidence. He made no attempt to locate his father all these days. The investigation is highly perfunctory in the present case. The obligation of the police agency is to work out the case honestly and fairly. The police easily made the accused an escape goat to be fixed in the crime. He was a regular visitor to the house of the deceased. There is no evidence that P. W. 2 had taken any umbrage upon the appellant visiting his house apart from his father that too just a few month before. That evidence too has seen the light of the day only in the trial. It was not stated by P. W. 2 in his 161 Cr. P. C. statement and the evidence pertaining to participation of his mother with the aid of Section 109 I. P. C. were equally missing in his 161 Cr. P. C. statement. No doubt on any one of them even was expressed. He had slated this fact during the trial admittedly for the first time. ( 13 ) IN view of these facts and circumstances even the motive falls to the ground and it is impossible for this Court to place any implicit reliance on the testimony so furnished by P. W. 2, the son of the victim against the mother, appellant Smt. Rampati. Probably the lust for money became the cause behind her involvement in the offence by him. He learnt about the demise of his father in a homicidal manner on 9th by seeing the photograph. Probably the lust for money became the cause behind her involvement in the offence by him. He learnt about the demise of his father in a homicidal manner on 9th by seeing the photograph. Being a railway employee he must have known that there will be provident fund and gratuity payable. He must also be knowing that his father has some LIC policies too. So to deprive the mother and the younger brother of these benefits, he felt it better to involve in the crime her and this appellant, who was a senior employee of the railways. Thus this witness seems to have made an attempt to kill two birds by one arrow. His admission is that he has got some money from the L. I. C. policies. He did not admit receipt of any money from gratuity and provident fund. We find unbelievable. It is common knowledge that the appellant entitled for the payment of. L. I. C. money on the pre-mature demise of his father if he was a nominee. No such evidence is on record. Thus the money was involved behind the entire episode in the involvement of the appellants is clearly discernible from his conduct. The witness made false allegations against the appellant and his own mother. He certainly must have entertained a suspicion that appellant Shiv Parsed will help his mother in obtaining the abovesaid money. His evidence with regard to younger son living with the mother and not living with him also tends to point to this situation. Greed is writ large in this part of his evidence. He was not entitled to any share in the life time of his mother. Entire money belonging to his father would have gone to the wife. His admission that he received payment from all these furnishes clear evidence of his decision. He desired it seems, full payment to himself. Thus the mystery seems to be lying somewhere else and the involvement of the two appellants was a sequel to that mystery i. e. lust for money on the part of P. W. 2. None of the witnesses examined by the prosecution for the 5 circumstances which were enumerated above claimed that they noticed any unnatural relationship between them during Rampatis stay in the Rajbhari village. None of the witnesses examined by the prosecution for the 5 circumstances which were enumerated above claimed that they noticed any unnatural relationship between them during Rampatis stay in the Rajbhari village. No witness from the place of residence was examined in the case to lend a corroborative hand to the story even remotely. No evidence of appellant Shiv Prasad making frequent visits to her house is available on the record. The chain therefore, is very loose There is no possibility of its excluding any impregnation by the hypothesis of innocence of the appellants. It is so vulnerable that it falls on the very first strike to the ground. There is no hope or chance of it holding firmly. ( 14 ) THE law requires from the prosecution when it relies solely on. circumstances that the evidence, that is to prove the set of circumstances, is to be so firm and convincing that there may not remain any space for the accused to call it loose. The interweaving of the chain of circumstances ought to be so state and stated that there may not be left any chance of its break from any point of its bind If any joint of its gives way to the hypothesis of innocence to enter into the accused succeeds in its demolition with impunity. convention would he hard to record in this situation. ( 15 ) THE Sessions Judge has wrongly relied upon the confession of the appellant and his injuries to the benefit of the prosecution. The evidence of the investigating officer cannot be relied upon for the bar created by Section 25 of Evidence Act, No witness of arrest and confession other than investigating officer was produced in trial. ( 16 ) IN the circumstances discussed above, this appeal is allowed. The conviction and sentence passed against the appellants is hereby set aside. They are acquitted of the charges for which they were convicted and sentenced. They are on bail. They need not surrender. Their bail bonds are cancelled and sureties are hereby discharged. . .