JANGI ALIAS RAM SINGH YADAV v. STATE OF UTTARAKHAND
2015-05-06
ALOK SINGH, SERVESH KUMAR GUPTA
body2015
DigiLaw.ai
JUDGMENT Per : Servesh Kumar Gupta, J. This judgment will adjudicate both the above-titled appeals as these have arisen out of the same judgment and order. 2. The case pertains to a mind baffling vicious crime wherefor the appellant has been found guilty for the offence of Section 302 IPC in addition to Section 25/4 Arms Act. He has been appropriately sentenced for the same by the learned Trial Judge vide his impugned judgment and order dated 18.12.2010. He was tried along with four other associates in Crime No. 26/96 under Section 302/34, 147, 302/149, 302 IPC as well as the Crime No. 28/96 under Section 25/4 Arms Act, PS Kankhal, District Haridwar. For convenience, we may advert the names of such accused persons Jangi @ Ram Singh Yadav as A1, Triloki as A2, Naresh as A3, Babu Lal as A4 and Sunil as A5. The entire trial could be culminated into acquittal of A2 to A5, while A1 has been convicted and punished as indicated above in ST No. 317/1996 and ST No. 318/1996. 3. The accused persons were charged for inflicting a fatal blow by a long sharp edged knife of two sides making the deceased mortally wounded and thus Mr. Rakesh, a youth of 26 years, lost his life. The incident happened on 3.3.1996 in Haridwar city around 10 PM near Mahila Milan Temple situated near a popular place Dam Kothi. On the date, at the time, little short of happening of the incident the informant Adesh Kumar (PW1, the real brother of the deceased), Bhushan Kumar (PW2), Sanjay, Rajendra, Ashok Kumar and others were, in order to collect the woods to be burnt in the Holi, were cutting a dried eucalyptus tree nearby. Thus, all persons along with the accused and deceased are the habitants in the close vicinity of the area. They were interrupted by all these accused persons, who asked them not to cut such wood. On failure to get favourable response, they left the place threatening to call Rafal Pal, a forest official, in order to invoke the legal action inasmuch as to their apprehension. While the accused persons were returning, they were confronted by Rakesh Kumar, the real brother of Adesh Kumar.
On failure to get favourable response, they left the place threatening to call Rafal Pal, a forest official, in order to invoke the legal action inasmuch as to their apprehension. While the accused persons were returning, they were confronted by Rakesh Kumar, the real brother of Adesh Kumar. As Rakesh Kumar could anticipate the stock of the trouble, so he was indulged in the altercations with the accused persons favouring the action of his brother Adesh Kumar and his companions. The quarrel escalated to the extent that A2, A3, A4 and A5 caught hold of Rakesh Kumar and A1 thrusted fatally the long knife in his abdomen making him mortally wounded. Having heard the screams of Rakesh, Adesh and his fellows rushed to his rescue. This cruel attack by A1 and his associates was witnessed by Adesh and his company friends from a short distance in the electricity lights spread from the nearby outpost lamps, but meanwhile all the accused persons took to their heels towards the Dam Kothi and disappeared. The injured Rakesh Kumar was soon shifted to the Government Hospital by his brother PW1 Adesh Kumar holding him as a pillion rider on a scooter driven by PW2 Bhushan Kumar. All efforts to save his life went in vain and he breathed his last at 1.15 AM of such intervening night in the hospital itself. So, this FIR Ex. Ka-1 was lodged at 2.15 AM of the selfsame night. Chick report whereof is Ex. Ka-9. 4. Dr. R.R. Verma (PW6), who first attended the injured in the hospital at 10.45 PM on 3.3.1996, did find the following injuries on the body of victim. Incised wound 8 cm x .2 cm x cavity deep in the abdomen which was 10 cm above from umbilicus in the position of 1 o’clock. The blood was oozing from the wound. X-ray was advised. The patient’s condition was quite serious and he could be able to breathe with short gaps to struggle for life. The injury was fresh and was caused by some sharp edged weapon. All out efforts to save his life could not fructify and thus Rakesh Kumar, a youth in the prime of his life, could not be kept alive. Such report of the doctor is Ex. Ka-3. 5. The inquest report Ex. Ka-12 was prepared in the hospital itself in the morning of 4.3.1996 at 9.30 AM.
All out efforts to save his life could not fructify and thus Rakesh Kumar, a youth in the prime of his life, could not be kept alive. Such report of the doctor is Ex. Ka-3. 5. The inquest report Ex. Ka-12 was prepared in the hospital itself in the morning of 4.3.1996 at 9.30 AM. Shankar Lal PW4 and Brij Mohan PW5, among others, are the witnesses of such report, who all ratified a common opinion that the death has been caused by stabbing the fiendish knife blow. 6. Autopsy was conducted on 4.3.1996 at 12.00 PM in the same hospital. Report is Ex. Ka-4. Following ante mortem injuries were reported by the doctor. (i) Incised wound 2 cm x 0.7 CM x abdominal cavity deep on left side of the abdomen, 10 cm above the umbilicus at 1 o’clock position. Wound is transversely placed and tailing towards right side. Margins are clear cut. (ii) Multiple abrasions in average of 3 cm x 1 cm on palmer aspect of little finger (left). (iii) Multiple abrasions in an area of 3.2 cm x 1.1 cm on palmer aspect of ring finger (left). (iv) Multiple abrasions in other areas of the body. 7. In the abdomen, approximately one and half litre blood was found accumulated. Large and small intestine were found cut. Left kidney and the mesentery were found ruptured. The doctor opined that the death was caused on account of shock and haemorrhage due to ante mortem injuries. Dr. S.K. Jain (PW7) has proved this autopsy report Ex. Ka-4. 8. The appellant along with other co-accused persons was arrested and the police recovered the murder weapon at the instance of the appellant A1 on 6.3.1996. The recovery memo Ex. Ka-2 was prepared bearing his signatures. The investigation ended into the submission of the chargesheet against all the accused persons, but the trial was adjudicated by the learned Trial Judge as aforementioned. So, having been convicted, A1 is before us in the instant appeal. 9. We have heard his learned Counsel as well as learned Additional Advocate General on behalf of the State and have considered the evidence available on the record. 10. PW1 Adesh Kumar and PW2 Bhushan Kumar are the eyewitnesses of the incident. They were present just at a distance of 100 paces and even from the map Ex.
9. We have heard his learned Counsel as well as learned Additional Advocate General on behalf of the State and have considered the evidence available on the record. 10. PW1 Adesh Kumar and PW2 Bhushan Kumar are the eyewitnesses of the incident. They were present just at a distance of 100 paces and even from the map Ex. Ka-5 prepared by the Investigation Officer, we can appreciate that when the shrieks were raised by the deceased, these could have been sufficiently louder to be in the hearing of eyewitnesses at point ‘A’ shown in the map, and this point ‘A’ is just at 4 or 5 paces gap from the main road, wherefrom the spot of incident is quite visible. It can be visualized that after hearing the voice of his brother Rakesh Kumar, all ran towards that direction and they could certainly be able to watch and identify the predators of the crime because all these assailants were not foreigners, but known persons habitating in the same vicinity. By the time, the witnesses could come close, the perpetrators after commission of this mind numbing crime could manage to escape from the spot. So, the argument of learned Defence Counsel that no witness could depose an ocular version of the incident before the Court does not hold the least water. There are as many as two eyewitnesses and out of these, one is the real brother PW1 Adesh Kumar supported by an independent eyewitness PW2 Bhushan Kumar. There is no such law that all the witnesses who saw the occurrence from their eyes should have been produced by the prosecution. There is no such requirement in the law. Plurality of the evidence is neither rule nor necessary in order to book the culprit. It is the quality which matters, as has been held in a galaxy of judgments by Hon’ble Apex Court as well as several other High Courts. 11. That apart, in such matters Section 6 of the Indian Evidence Act is quite applicable which reads as under: “6. Relevancy of facts forming part of same transaction.—Facts which, though not in issue, are so connected with a fact in issue as to form part of the same transaction, are relevant, whether they occurred at the same time and place or at different times and places.” 12.
Relevancy of facts forming part of same transaction.—Facts which, though not in issue, are so connected with a fact in issue as to form part of the same transaction, are relevant, whether they occurred at the same time and place or at different times and places.” 12. Its illustration (a) may also be quoted in order to derive a right conclusion, which reads as under: “(a) A is accused of the murder of B by beating him. Whatever was said or done by A or B or the by-standers at the beating, or so shortly before or after it as to form part of the transaction, is a relevant fact.” 13. Thrusting by a long knife has already been seen by witnesses from a short distance while running to the spot in order to rescue the deceased. Moreover, the incident as it happened and the inflicting of such blow was disclosed by the deceased to the witnesses as has been narrated in the FIR as well as in the depositions of the eyewitnesses. So, their evidence is relevant and admissible from that angle also. 14. Learned Counsel of the appellant has put forth a submission that when the injured was being shifted to the hospital while sitting on a scooter in between PW1 and PW2 as a pillion rider, then the blood should have spotted on the clothes of either of the witnesses. This argument is quite shallow and rejected by this Court for the reason that such a minor lapse on the part of the Investigation Officer cannot put aside the entire culpable evidence, and more so because such Investigation Officer (PW10) was examined on 17.9.2004 after more than 8 and half years of the incident. 15. The Court has also meticulously noticed that every crucial witness was not examined by the learned Counsel of A1 without returning to come on the next date for the reason that every attempt might have been made to pressurize and win over them, yet they have not resiled from their statement given by them to the Investigation Officer under Section 161 CrPC. 16. Another significant piece of evidence leading to the finding of guilt is the recovery of murder weapon at the instance of A1 within 3 days of the incident. Recovery memo Ex.
16. Another significant piece of evidence leading to the finding of guilt is the recovery of murder weapon at the instance of A1 within 3 days of the incident. Recovery memo Ex. Ka-2 bears the signature of appellant convict Jangi @ Ram Singh Yadav, and while being asked under Section 313 CrPC to clarify such recovery, he has neither specifically denied such recovery nor his signature on such memo. Simply a formal routine evading answer has come from his utterances that “the statement is false”. Recovery of such murder weapon has also been proved by PW3 S.I. Yagya Naraayan Mishra, whose testimony is unimpeachable. 17. In view of what has been discussed above, it is our considered opinion that the perpetrator of the crime like appellant, who takes away the life of an innocent person in such a cruel manner with impunity, must not go scot-free by prowling the imaginative doubts in the prosecution story and thus we sustain the conviction and sentence as recorded by the learned Trial Judge. 18. Resultantly, these appeals are bereft of any merit and thus fail. Appellant Jangi @ Ram Singh Yadav is on bail. His bail bonds are cancelled. He shall be arrested without any delay and put behind the bars to undergo the sentence as awarded. Copy of this judgment, along with LCR, be sent back to the Court below for compliance.