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Monday, December 17, 2012

In the absence of any kind of clinching evidence to connect the appellants with the crime, we are disposed to think that it would not be appropriate to sustain the conviction. 28. In the result, the appeal is allowed. The judgment of conviction and sentence recorded by the learned Sessions Judge and affirmed by the High Court is set aside and the appellants be set at liberty forthwith unless their detention is required in connection with any other case.


                        IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA

                       CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION

                       CRIMINAL APPEAL No. 114 of 2008


Lahu Kamlakar Patil and Anr.                 ….. Appellants

                             Versus

State of Maharashtra                         … Respondent









                               J U D G M E N T



Dipak  Misra, J.


      The present appeal has been preferred by original accused Nos.  2  and
3 assailing the judgment of conviction and order of sentence passed  by  the
High Court of Judicature at Bombay  in  Criminal  Appeal  No.  790  of  1989
whereby the High Court has confirmed the conviction and sentence  passed  by
the learned Additional Sessions Judge, Raigad, Alibag in Sessions  Case  No.
113 of 1988 for offences punishable under Sections 302, 147,  148,  149  and
452 of the Indian Penal Code, 1860 (for short “the  I.P.C.”)  and  sentenced
the appellants to suffer life imprisonment and  pay  a  fine  of  Rs.1,000/-
each, in default, to suffer simple imprisonment for six months.

   2. Filtering the unnecessary details, the prosecution  case  is  that  on
      19.2.1988, PW-1, Chandrakant Phunde, the informant, who is  the  owner
      of a rickshaw bearing No. MCT-858, while going from Somatane to Panvel
      for his business, met PW-2, Janardan Bhonkar, who hired  his  rickshaw
      for Panvel.  On  the  way,  they  met  the  deceased  Shriram  @  Bhau
      Harishchandra Patil who wanted to go in  the  rickshaw  and  with  the
      consent of Janardan, the three of them proceeded towards Panvel.   The
      deceased, Bhau Harishchandra Patil, went to Gemini Tailors to pick  up
      his stitched clothes at Palaspe Phata and thereafter they stopped near
      Milan Hotel to have some snacks.  As the prosecution  story  proceeds,
      when they were inside the hotel, 10 to 15 people entered inside  being
      armed with swords, iron bars and sticks.  As  alleged,  Lahu  Kamlakar
      Patil, the appellant No. 1, had an iron bar and appellant No. 2,  Bali
      Ram, had a sword.  Bali Ram and Lahu assaulted  the  deceased  on  his
      head with their respective weapons and the other accused persons  also
      assaulted him.  Janardan tried to resist and got hit on his right hand
      finger due to the blow inflicted by the sword.  As there was commotion
      in the hotel, people ran hither and thither, and PW-2, Janardan,  also
      took the escape route.  After the assault,  the  accused  persons  ran
      away and Bhau was left lying there in the hotel in a pool of blood.

   3. As the facts are further unfurled,  Chandrakant  Phunde  went  to  the
      police station, lodged an F.I.R. and handed over the stitched  clothes
      of the deceased which were in the rickshaw  to  the  police.   On  the
      basis of the F.I.R., a case under Sections 147, 148, 149, 302 and  452
      of the I.P.C. was registered and the criminal law was set  in  motion.
      In the course of  investigation,  the  investigating  agency  got  the
      autopsy  conduted,  seized  the  weapons,  prepared  the  `panchnama’,
      examined the witnesses under Section  161  of  the  Code  of  Criminal
      Procedure, 1973 (for  short  “the  Code”)  and  arrested  six  accused
      persons  including  the  present  appellants.   After  completing  the
      investigation, the investigating agency placed the charge-sheet before
      the competent Court who, in turn, committed the matter to the Court of
      Session and, eventually,  it  was  tried  by  the  learned  Additional
      Sessions Judge, Raigad Alibag.

   4. The accused persons abjured their guilt and pleaded false  implication
      and, hence, faced trial.

   5. In order to prove its case, the prosecution examined  nine  witnesses;
      PW-1, Chandrakant Phunde, the informant, PW-2, Janardan  Bhonkar,  who
      was an eye-witness to the occurrence,  PW-3,  Shantaram  Jadhav,  from
      whom the accused persons had made enquires relating to the whereabouts
      of the deceased, PW-4, Baburao Patil, father of  the  deceased,  PW-5,
      Prakash Patil, a post-occurrence witness who had reached  Hotel  Milan
      to find that Bhau was lying in a pool of blood,  PW-6,  the  Inspector
      who had  registered  the  complaint of  PW-1, PW-7, Dyaneshwar  Patil,
      a panch witness who has proven the blood-stained clothes and the  iron
      bar,  PW-8, Eknath Kamble, and PW-9, Shrirang Wahulkar, the two  other
      panch witnesses who have been declared hostile.

   6. The defence chose not to adduce any evidence.

   7. The learned trial Judge, after scrutiny of the  evidence,  found  that
      the prosecution had been able to prove the case  against  the  present
      appellants and, accordingly,  convicted  them  for  the  offences  and
      imposed the sentence as has been stated hereinbefore.  As far  as  the
      other accused persons are concerned, he did not find them guilty  and,
      accordingly, recorded an order of acquittal in their favour.

   8. The convicted-accused persons assailed their conviction by  filing  an
      appeal and the High Court, placing reliance on the seizure  memoranda,
      namely, Exhibits P-25, 26, 35 and 36 and accepting the credibility  of
      the testimony of PW-2  and  a  part  of  the  evidence  of  PW-1,  the
      informant, who had turned hostile, affirmed  the  conviction  and  the
      sentence.

   9. We have heard Mr. K.N. Rai, learned counsel for  the  appellants,  and
      Mr. Sanjay V. Kharde, learned counsel for the respondent.

  10. Mr. Rai, learned counsel for the appellants, criticizing the  judgment
      of conviction passed by  the  High  Court,  submitted  that  when  the
      version of PWs-3 to 5 have not been given credence, the evidence of PW-
      1 and PW-2 should not have been relied upon by the trial court as well
      as by the High Court  and  due  to  such  reliance,  the  decision  is
      vitiated.  It is urged by him  that  when  the  informant  had  turned
      hostile, the F.I.R. could not have been relied  upon  as  a  piece  of
      substantial evidence corroborating the testimony of PW-2, the  alleged
      eye-witness.  It is vehemently canvassed by him  that  the  conviction
      has been rested on the testimony of PW-2 who has claimed to be the eye-
      witness though his  version  is  totally  unreliable  because  of  his
      unnatural conduct and his  non-availability  for  examination  by  the
      police which is not founded on any ground.  It is urged  by  him  that
      the Investigating Officer had not been examined as  a  consequence  of
      which prejudice has been caused to the appellants.   That  apart,  the
      seizure of weapons has not been established since the panch  witnesses
      have turned hostile and the High Court has relied upon  the  discovery
      made at the instance of accused No. 1 who  has  been  acquitted.   The
      last plank of argument of the learned counsel for  the  appellants  is
      that the conviction is recorded on the basis  of  assumptions  without
      material on record to convict the appellants.

  11.  Mr. Kharde, learned counsel for the State, supporting the judgment of
      conviction, contended that though the informant  had  turned  hostile,
      yet his evidence cannot be totally discarded as it is well settled  in
      law that the same can be relied upon by the prosecution as well as  by
      the defence.  It is his further submission that the evidence of  PW-1,
      Chandrakant Phunde, clearly proves the first part of the incident  and
      what he has stated in the examination-in-chief cannot be  disregarded.
      It is urged by him that once that part of the testimony  is  accepted,
      the  deposition  of  PW-2,  the  eyewitness  to  the  incident   gains
      acceptation as he has vividly described the incident and the  assault.
      Learned counsel would further submit that the minor contradictions and
      discrepancies do not make his deposition unreliable.

  12. At the very outset, we may state that  the  learned  trial  Judge  had
      placed reliance on the evidence of PWs-3 to 5, but the High Court  has
      not accepted their version and affirmed the conviction on the basis of
      the testimony of PWs-1 and 2 and other circumstances.  Therefore,  the
      evidence of the witnesses which are required to be considered is  that
      of PWs-1 and 2 and their intrinsic worth.

  13. PW-1, the informant, has stated in the examination-in-chief  that  the
      deceased had taken PW-2, Janardan Bhonkar, to the tailor’s  shop  and,
      eventually, took Bhau to Milan Hotel where he waited  outside  in  the
      rickshaw.  He has also deposed that he was asked to  come  inside  the
      hotel and while he was having  water,  8-10  boys  arrived  there  and
      started assaulting the deceased.  Seeing the assault,  he  got  scared
      and ran away.  After deposing to that effect, he has  stated  that  he
      had not seen anything and he was taken to the police station  and  his
      signature was taken on the complaint  which  was  not  shown  to  him.
      After being declared hostile, in the cross-examination he  has  denied
      the contents of the F.I.R. and has deposed that he came to  know  that
      Bhau had been murdered.

  14. In the cross-examination by one of the accused, he has stated that  he
      was brought to the police station in a drunken state and kept  in  the
      police station till 10.00 a.m. the next day.  The trial court as  well
      as the High Court has accepted his version in the examination-in-chief
      to the extent that he had taken the deceased and PW-2 to the  tailor’s
      shop and thereafter to the hotel and further that  he  had  seen  8-10
      boys entering the hotel and assaulting the deceased.

  15. The learned counsel  for  the  appellants  submitted  that  the  whole
      evidence of PW-1 is to be discarded inasmuch as he has clearly  stated
      that he has not seen anything and his signature was taken on the blank
      paper.  In any case, he has not deposed anything about the  assailants
      except stating that 8-10 boys came and assaulted.  Emphasis  had  been
      laid that the informant having been declared hostile, the  whole  case
      of the prosecution story  collapses  like  a  pack  of  cards.   Thus,
      emphasis is on the aspect that once a  witness  is  declared  hostile,
      that too in the present circumstances, his testimony cannot be  relied
      upon by the prosecution.

16.   It is settled in law that the evidence of a hostile witness is not  to
be rejected in toto. In Rameshbhai Mohanbhai Koli and  Others  v.  State  of
Gujarat[1], reiterating the principle, this Court has stated thus:-

           “16. It is settled legal proposition  that  the  evidence  of  a
           prosecution witness cannot be rejected in  toto  merely  because
           the prosecution chose to treat him as hostile and cross-examined
           him. The evidence of such witnesses cannot be treated as effaced
           or washed off the record altogether but the same can be accepted
           to the extent that their version is found to be dependable on  a
           careful scrutiny  thereof.  (Vide  Bhagwan  Singh  v.  State  of
           Haryana[2], Rabindra Kumar Dey v. State of Orissa[3], Syad Akbar
           v. State of Karnataka[4] and Khujji v. State of M.P.[5])

           17. In State of U.P. v. Ramesh Prasad Misra[6]  this  Court  held
               that evidence of a  hostile  witness  would  not  be  totally
               rejected if spoken  in  favour  of  the  prosecution  or  the
               accused but required to be subjected to  close  scrutiny  and
               that portion of the evidence which  is  consistent  with  the
               case of the prosecution or defence can  be  relied  upon.   A
               similar view has been reiterated by this Court in Balu  Sonba
               Shinde v. State of Maharashtra[7], Gagan Kanojia v. State  of
               Punjab[8], Radha Mohan Singh v.  State  of  U.P.[9],  Sarvesh
               Narain  Shukla  v.  Daroga  Singh[10]  and  Subbu  Singh   v.
               State[11].”




17.   Recently, in Bhajju alias Karan Singh v. State of Madhya  Pradesh[12],
a two-Judge Bench, in the context of  consideration  of  the  version  of  a
hostile witness, has expressed thus: -
          “Normally, when a witness deposes contrary to the  stand  of  the
          prosecution and his own  statement  recorded  under  Section  161
          CrPC, the prosecutor, with the permission of the court, can  pray
          to the court for declaring that witness hostile and for  granting
          leave to cross-examine the said witness. If such a permission  is
          granted by the court then the  witness  is  subjected  to  cross-
          examination by the  prosecutor  as  well  as  an  opportunity  is
          provided to the defence to cross-examine such witnesses, if he so
          desires. In other words, there is a limited examination-in-chief,
          cross-examination by the prosecutor and cross-examination by  the
          counsel for the accused. It is admissible to use the examination-
          in-chief as well as the cross-examination  of  the  said  witness
          insofar as it supports the case of the prosecution.”

                                     [Emphasis added]



18.   In the case of Sidhartha Vashisht alias Manu Sharma v. State  (NCT  of
Delhi)[13], while discussing about the evidence  of  a  witness  who  turned
hostile, the Bench observed that his evidence to the effect of the  presence
of accused at the scene of the offence was acceptable  and  the  prosecution
could definitely rely upon the same.

19.   Keeping in view the aforesaid position of law, the testimony of  PW  1
has to be appreciated.  He has admitted his signature in the F.I.R. but  has
given the excuse that it was taken on a blank paper.  The  same  could  have
been clarified by the  Investigating  Officer,  but  for  some  reason,  the
Investigating Officer has not been examined by the prosecution.   It  is  an
accepted principle that non-examination of the Investigating Officer is  not
fatal to the prosecution case.  In Behari  Prasad  v.  State  of  Bihar[14],
this Court has stated that non-examination of the Investigating  Officer  is
not fatal to the prosecution case, especially, when no prejudice  is  likely
to be suffered by the accused.  In Bahadur Naik v. State  of  Bihar[15],  it
has been opined that when no material contradictions have been brought  out,
then non-examination of the Investigating  Officer  as  a  witness  for  the
prosecution is of no consequence and under such circumstances, no  prejudice
is caused to the accused.  It is worthy  to  note  that  neither  the  trial
judge nor the High Court has delved into the  issue  of  non-examination  of
the Investigating Officer.  On a perusal of the entire material  brought  on
record, we find that no explanation has been offered.  The present  case  is
one where we are inclined to think so  especially  when  the  informant  has
stated that the signature was taken while he was in  a  drunken  state,  the
panch witness had turned hostile and some of the  evidence  adduced  in  the
court did not find place in the statement recorded under Section 161 of  the
Code.  Thus, this Court in Arvind Singh v. State of Bihar[16], Rattanlal  v.
State of Jammu and Kashmir[17] and Ravishwar Manjhi and others v.  State  of
Jharkhand[18], has explained certain circumstances where the examination  of
Investigating Officer becomes vital.  We are  disposed  to  think  that  the
present case is  one  where  the  Investigating  Officer  should  have  been
examined and his non-examination  creates  a  lacuna  in  the  case  of  the
prosecution.

20.   Having stated that, we may proceed to analyse his  evidence.   He  has
supported the prosecution story but to the point of assault  and  thereafter
he has resiled from his version.  The submission of the learned counsel  for
the State is that to such extent his testimony  deserves  acceptance.   Even
if the said submission is accepted, it only goes to the  extent  of  proving
that PWs-1 and 2 and the deceased had travelled in a rickshaw, went  to  the
tailor’s shop, entered inside the Milan Hotel and some boys came inside  the
hotel  and  started  assaulting  the  deceased.   PW-1  had  not  named  any
assailant in the court to support the version of the FIR.  On a scanning  of
the evidence, we find that he had stated that  he  had  run  away  from  the
scene of assault and,  therefore,  his  testimony  does  not,  in  any  way,
establish the involvement of the appellants in crime.

21.   On a scrutiny of the entire material  on  record,  we  find  that  the
conviction is based on the testimony of the sole eyewitness, PW-2.  True  it
is, corroboration to the extent of going to Milan Hotel is  there  from  the
testimony of PW-1, but the question remains whether the  conviction  can  be
sustained if the version of PW-2 is not accepted.  The learned  counsel  for
the appellants has seriously challenged the reliability and  trustworthiness
of the said witness, PW-2, who has been cited as an eyewitness.

22.   The attack is based on the grounds, namely, that the said witness  ran
away from the spot; that he did not intimate the police about  the  incident
but, on the contrary, hid himself behind the pipes near a canal  till  early
morning of the next day; that though he claimed to be eye  witness,  yet  he
did not come to the spot when the police arrived  and  was  there  for  more
than three hours; that contrary to normal human behaviour he  went  to  Pune
without informing about the incident to his wife and  stayed  for  one  day;
that though the police station was hardly one furlong away yet  he  did  not
approach the police; that he chose not even to  inform  the  police  on  the
telephone though he arrived at home;  that  after  he  came  from  Pune  and
learnt from his wife that the police had come on 21.2.1988, he went  to  the
police station; and that in the backdrop of such conduct, his  version  does
not inspire confidence and deserves to be ignored in toto.

23.   From the aforesaid grounds, the primary attack of the learned  counsel
for the appellants is that there has been delay in the  examination  of  the
said witness  and  he  has  contributed  for  such  delay  and,  hence,  his
testimony should be discredited.  In Mohd. Khalid v. State  of  W.B.[19],  a
contention was raised that three  witnesses,  namely,  PWs-40,  67  and  68,
could not be termed to be reliable.   Such  a  contention  was  advanced  as
regards PW-68 that there had been  delay  in  his  examination.   The  Court
observed that mere delay in examination of the  witnesses  for  a  few  days
cannot in all cases be termed fatal so  far  as  prosecution  is  concerned.
There may be several reasons and when the delay is explained,  whatever  the
length of delay, the court can act on the testimony of the witnesses, if  it
is found to be cogent and credible.  On behalf of the  prosecution,  it  was
urged that PW-68 was attending to the injured persons  and  taking  them  to
the hospital.  Though there was noting in the medical reports  that  unknown
persons had brought them, yet the court did not discard the evidence of  PW-
68 therein on the foundation that when an incident of such  great  magnitude
takes place and injured persons are brought to the hospital  for  treatment,
it is the foremost duty of the doctors and other members  of  the  staff  to
provide immediate treatment and not  to  go  about  collecting  information,
though that would be contrary to the normal human conduct.   Thus,  emphasis
was laid on the circumstance and the conduct.

24.   In Gopal Singh and others v. State of Madhya Pradesh[20],  this  Court
had overturned the judgment of  the  High  Court  as  it  had  accepted  the
statement of an eyewitness of  the  evidence  ignoring  the  fact  that  his
behaviour was unnatural as he claimed to have rushed to the village but  had
still not conveyed the information about the incident  to  his  parents  and
others present there and had chosen to disappear for a couple  of  hours  on
the spacious and unacceptable plea that he feared for his own safety.

25.   In Alil Mollah and another v. State of W.B.[21],  an  eyewitness,  who
was employee of the deceased, witnessed the assault on the employer but  did
not go near the employer even after the assailants had fled away to see  the
condition in which the employer was after having suffered the assault.   His
plea was that he was frightened and fled away to his home.  He had  admitted
in his cross-examination that he neither disclosed at his home  nor  in  his
village as to what he had seen in the evening when  the  incident  occurred.
He gave the information to the police only after  2-3  days.   The  plea  of
being frightened and not picking up courage to inform anyone in the  village
or elsewhere was not accepted by this Court.

26.   From the aforesaid pronouncements,  it  is  vivid  that  witnesses  to
certain crimes may run away from the scene and may also leave the place  due
to fear and if there is  any  delay  in  their  examination,  the  testimony
should not be discarded.   That apart, a court has  to  keep  in  mind  that
different witnesses react  differently  under  different  situations.   Some
witnesses get a shock, some become perplexed, some start  wailing  and  some
run away from the scene and yet some who have  the  courage  and  conviction
come forward either to lodge an FIR or get themselves examined  immediately.
 Thus,  it  differs  from  individuals  to  individuals.   There  cannot  be
uniformity in human reaction.  While the said principle has to  be  kept  in
mind, it is also to be borne in mind that if the conduct of the  witness  is
so unnatural and is not in accord with acceptable human  behaviour  allowing
of variations, then his testimony becomes questionable and is likely  to  be
discarded.

27.   Keeping in mind the aforesaid, we  shall  proceed  to  scrutinize  the
evidence of PW-2.
As is  evincible  from  his  deposition,  on  seeing  the
assault he got scared, ran away from the hotel and hid  himself  behind  the
pipes till early morning.
He went home, changed his clothes and  rushed  to
Pune.
He did not mention about the incident  to  his  family  members.  
He
left for Pune and the reason for the same was also not stated to his  family
members.
He did not try to contact the police from his residence  which  he
could have.
After his arrival  at  Pune,  he  did  not  mention  about  the
incident in his sister-in-law’s house.
After coming back from Pune, on  the
third day of the occurrence, his wife informed that the police had come  and
that Bhau, who had accompanied him, was dead.
It  is  interesting  to  note
that in the statement under Section 161 of the Code, he had not stated  that
he was hiding himself out of fear or he was scared of the  police.   In  the
said statement, the fact that he was informed by  his  wife  that  Bhau  was
dead was also not mentioned.  
One thing is clear  from  his  testimony  that
seeing the incident, he was scared and frightened  and  ran  away  from  the
hotel.  He was frightened and hid himself behind the  pipes  throughout  the
night and left for home the next morning.  But his  conduct  not  to  inform
his wife or any family member and leaving for Pune and  not  telling  anyone
there defies normal human behaviour.
He has also not stated  anywhere  that
he was so scared that even after he reached home,  he  did  not  go  to  the
police station which was hardly at any distance from his  house.  
There  is
nothing in his testimony that he was under any kind of fear  or  shock  when
he arrived at his house.
It is also surprising that he  had  not  told  his
family members and he went to Pune without disclosing the reason  and  after
he arrived from Pune and on being informed by his wife  that  his  companion
Bhau had died, he went to the police station.
We are not oblivious  of  the
fact that certain witnesses in certain circumstances may be  frightened  and
behave in a different manner and due  to  that,  they  may  make  themselves
available to the police belatedly and their examination gets  delayed.   But
in the case at hand, regard being had to  the  evidence  brought  on  record
and, especially, non-mentioning of any kind of explanation for rushing  away
to Pune, the said factors make the veracity of his  version  doubtful.   His
evidence cannot be treated as so trustworthy and unimpeachable to  record  a
conviction against the appellants.
The learned trial court as well  as  the
High Court has made an endeavour to connect the links  and  inject  theories
like fear, behavioural  pattern,  tallying  of  injuries  inflicted  on  the
deceased with the Post Mortem report and convicted the appellants.  
In  the
absence of any kind of clinching evidence to  connect  the  appellants  with
the crime, we are disposed to think that it  would  not  be  appropriate  to
sustain the conviction.

28.   In the result, the appeal is allowed.  The judgment of conviction  and
sentence recorded by the learned Sessions Judge and  affirmed  by  the  High
Court is set aside and the appellants be set  at  liberty  forthwith  unless
their detention is required in connection with any other case.

                                                             ……………………………….J.
                                                       [K. S. Radhakrishnan]




New Delhi;                                    ……………………………….J.
December 14, 2012                                 [Dipak Misra]


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[1]    (2011) 11 SCC 111
[2]    (1976) 1 SCC 389
[3]    (1976) 4 SCC 233
[4]    (1980) 1 SCC 30
[5]    (1991) 3 SCC 627
[6]    (1996) 10 SCC 360
[7]    (2002) 7 SCC 543
[8]    (2006) 13 SCC 516
[9]    (2006) 2 SCC 450
[10]   (2007) 13 SCC 360
[11]   (2009) 6 SCC 462
[12]   (2012) 4 SCC 327
[13]   (2010) 6 SCC 1
[14]   (1996) 2 SCC 317
[15]   (2000) 9 SCC 153
[16]   (2001) 6 SCC 407
[17]   (2007) 13 SCC 18
[18]   (2008) 16 SCC 561
[19]   (2002) 7 SCC 334
[20]   (2010) 6 SCC 407
[21]   (1996) 5 SCC 369

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