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Saturday, February 25, 2012
Apex court confirmed the death penalty =Five members of a family including two minor children and the driver were ruthlessly killed by the use of a knife, an axe and an iron rod and with the help of four others. The crime was obviously committed after pre- meditation with absolutely no consideration for human lives
Reportable
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CRIMINAL APPEAL NOs. 1333-1334 OF 2010
Sonu Sardar ...... Appellant
Versus
State of Chhattisgarh ...... Respondent
J U D G M E N T
A. K. PATNAIK, J.
These are appeals against the judgment of the High
Court of Chhattisgarh in Criminal Reference No.1 of 2008
and Criminal Appeal No. 240 of 2008 confirming the
conviction of the appellant and the death penalty imposed on
him under Section 396 of the Indian Penal Code (for short
`IPC').
2. The prosecution case very briefly is that on 26.11.2004,
Shamim Akhtar (for short `Shamim'), a scrap dealer and a
resident of village Cher, Distt. Baikunthpur, Chhattisgarh,
had gone to Raipur for selling scrap. He sold the scrap and
received cash of Rs.1,70,000/- and returned to his house
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with the cash. His wife, Ruksana Bibi, kept the cash in
different places of her house, which was to be deposited in
the bank the next day. At about 6.00 p.m. on 26.11.2004,
Sonu Sardar, the appellant herein, and Ajay Singh @ Fotu
along with three other persons came with scrap to the shop
of Shamim and left after selling scrap for Rs.480/-. The
appellant and Ajay Singh and three other persons, however,
returned at about 7.00 p.m. on the same day and knocked
on the door of the house of Shamim. When the door was
opened, the appellant and Ajay Singh and three other
persons demanded money from Shamim. One of these five
persons then bolted the door from inside and two other
persons caught hold of Asgar Ali, driver of Shamim, and one
of them caught hold of Shamim. They kept a knife on the
neck of Shamim and compelled him to give cash which he
was having in his pocket. Shabana Khatun (for short
`Shabana'), the daughter of Shamim, who was present inside,
tried to fight but an attempt was made by the appellant and
his people to assault her and she somehow escaped through
the back door and went to the house of Ramlal, a kilometer
away from the house of Shamim. Shabana told Ramlal
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about the incident at her house and when Ramlal wanted to
go to their house, Shabana asked him not to go because she
was afraid that Sonu Sardar and others may kill him. That
night Shabana stayed at the house of Ramlal and next
morning at about 4-5 a.m., Shabana, Ramlal and his wife
Dhanpatbai came to the house of Shamim and found that
Yakut and Asna, 3 years old son and 5 years old daughter of
Shamim, were crying near the dead bodies of Shamim,
Ruksana Bibi, Yakub and Kumari Rana, 7 years old son and
9 years old daughter of Shamim. Shabana then went to
Baikunthpur and narrated the incident to her uncle Nasim
Akhtar, who reported the matter the Police. The Police
reached the spot and the FIR was lodged. The dead bodies
were sent for autopsy to the Community Health Centre,
Baikunthpur, and a team led by Dr. Ashok Kumar carried
out the post mortem. In course of investigation, the
Investigating Officer recorded statements of several persons
under Section 161, Cr.P.C. The appellant and his co-
accused, Ajay and Chhoti Bai, were arrested but the other
persons absconded after commission of crime. Blood-stained
T-shirt and turban of the appellant and an axe with broken
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handle, a rod and a knife were seized. Test Identification
Parade was carried out on 01.12.2004 in which Shabana
identified the appellant as well as Ajay as two of the five
persons who had come to the house of Shamim on
26.11.2004 and were demanding money. The seized articles
were sent to the Forensic Science Laboratory, Raipur. After
completion of investigation, a chargesheet was filed and
Sessions Trial No.06/2006 was conducted by the Sessions
Judge, Koriya, Baikunthpur (Chhattisgarh).
3. In course of the trial, the prosecution examined 38
witnesses. Shabana was examined as PW-1, Ramlal was
examined as PW-2, Nasim Akhtar was examined as PW-3 and
Dhanpatbai was examined as PW-4. Dr. Ashok Kumar was
examined as PW-36 and the Investigating Officer was
examined as PW-37. A large number of documents and the
seized articles were also exhibited. The trial court recorded
the statements of the appellant under Section 313, Cr. P.C.
After hearing the arguments, the trial court held that it was
clear from the evidence of PW-1, PW-2, PW-3 and PW-4 that
the appellant had committed the dacoity at the house of
Shamim between 7.00 p.m. of 26.11.2004 and 4.00 a.m. of
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27.11.2004 and thereafter committed murder of Shamim,
Asgar, Ruksana Bibi, Yakub and Kumari Rana with rod,
knife and axe and that the prosecution had succeeded in
establishing the guilt of the appellant under Section 396,
IPC, beyond reasonable doubt. After hearing counsel for the
parties on the question of sentence, the trial court also held
that the case falls in the category of rarest of rare cases and
imposed the sentence of death on the appellant. By the
impugned judgment, the High Court has confirmed the
conviction of the appellant under Section 396, IPC, and also
the sentence of death.
4. Learned counsel for the appellant submitted that the
appellant had been convicted on the sole testimony of
Shabana (PW-1), a ten years old child who could not have
identified the appellant as one of the five persons who
committed the dacoity and murder on the night of
26.11.2004. She submitted that it is on the information
received from PW-1 that PW-3 had lodged the FIR, but in the
FIR the appellant has not been named. She argued that had
PW-1 known the appellant, she would have told PW-3 the
name of the appellant and PW-3 would have mentioned the
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name of the appellant in the FIR. She submitted that it will
therefore not be safe for this Court to sustain the conviction
of the appellant.
5. Learned counsel for the State, on the other hand,
submitted that although PW-1 is a minor, her evidence was
reliable and she had stood the test of cross-examination. He
further submitted that PW-1 narrated the incident not only
to PW-3, but also to PW-2 and PW-4 and the evidence of PW-
2 and PW-4 would show that PW-1 had clearly mentioned
that out of the five persons, who had committed the dacoity
and murder on the night of 26.11.2004, there was a sardar.
He further submitted that PW-1 has also stated in her
evidence that the appellant had gone to her father's shop 5 to
6 times before the 26.11.2004 to sell scrap and hence she
could identify him as one of the five persons who had
committed the dacoity and murder on the night of
26.11.2004. Moreover, at the time of the Test Identification
Parade conducted by the Magistrate (PW-11), PW-1 identified
the appellant as one of the five persons, who had come to the
house of Shamim on 26.11.2004 and were demanding
money. He submitted that the evidence of PW-1 that the
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appellant participated in the dacoity and murder on
26.11.2004 is corroborated by the recovery of the iron rod
and axe on the statement of the appellant and by the fact
that the seized T-shirt and turban of the appellant were
blood-stained.
6. We have considered the submissions of learned counsel
for the parties and we find that during investigation a Test
Identification Parade was carried out on 01.12.2004 and out
of the ten persons who were presented, the appellant and
Ajay Singh @ Fotu were identified by PW-1 as the two
persons, who were amongst the five persons who had come to
the house of Shamim and were demanding money from him.
From the evidence of PW-2 as well as the evidence of PW-4,
we find that PW-1, soon after she escaped from the house of
Shamim, has mentioned that one of the five persons who had
gone to the house of Shamim was a sardar. In her cross-
examination, PW-1 has stated that she knew the appellant as
he had come to their house for selling scrap. Moreover, the
broken axe with broken handle and iron rod (Ext. P.24) were
recovered pursuant to the statement of the appellant (Ext.
P.16). PW-36, Dr. Ashok Kumar, after narrating the injuries
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on the dead bodies of Shamim, Asgar Ali, Ruksana Bibi,
Yakub and Kumari Rana, has opined that the death has been
on account of shock as a result of fatal injuries. The injuries
described by them are not only incised wounds but multiple
fractures of temporal and parietal bones and on the head
which could have been caused by the axe and the iron rod.
The report of the Forensic Science Laboratory (Ext.P.61)
confirms presence of human blood on the clothes of the
deceased persons, axe and iron rod (Ext. P.24) as well as the
turban and T-shirt of the appellant (Ext. P.37) which had
been seized. Thus, the conviction of the appellant is not only
based on the oral testimony of PW-1, but also the evidence of
PW-2, PW-3, PW-4, PW-36, the seized articles and also the
report of the Forensic Science Laboratory. It is further
established from the evidence of PW-1 and the Panchanama
of the house of Shamim made on 28.11.2004 that only cash
of Rs.65,760/- was available and the remaining cash out of
Rs.1,70,000/- was missing. The prosecution has, in our
considered opinion, proved beyond reasonable doubt that the
appellant participated in the offence of dacoity and murder
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and has been rightly convicted for the offence under Section
396, IPC.
7. On the question of sentence, learned counsel for the
appellant submitted that this Court has held in Ramesh and
others v. State of Rajasthan [(2011) 3 SCC 685] that before
awarding death sentence, the trial court was expected to give
elaborate reasons. She submitted that the reasons given by
the trial court for awarding death sentence on the appellant
were not elaborate. She submitted that in Ramesh and
others v. State of Rajasthan (supra) this Court did not find
clear evidence as to which of the three persons who
participated in the crime was the actual author of the
injuries on Ramlal and Shanti Devi and held that as it is
difficult to say that Ramesh alone was the author of the
injuries on Ramlal as well as Shanti Devi, death sentence
awarded to Ramesh should be modified to life imprisonment.
She submitted that in the present case also five persons have
committed the offence under Section 396, IPC, and as the
actual role of the appellant in the offence is not known the
death sentence should be modified to life imprisonment.
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8. Learned counsel for the State, on the other hand,
submitted that the appellant has participated in the offence
under Section 396, IPC, and as many as five innocent
persons, including two children, have lost their lives and the
trial court has given sufficient reasons for awarding death
sentence to the appellant. He cited the decision of this Court
in Sushil Murmu v. State of Jharkhand [(2004) 2 SCC 338] for
the proposition that the punishment should be proportionate
to the crime committed by the accused. He submitted that in
the facts of the present case, since the crime was heinous in
nature and resulted in the death of five persons, death
sentence would be proportionate to the crime committed by
the appellant. He also relied on Atbir v. Government of NCT
of Delhi [(2010) 9 SCC 1] in which this Court held that
preventing persons in the house to escape and committing
brutal murder of as many as three persons inside the house
are aggravating circumstances warranting imposition of
death sentence on the accused. He submitted that in the
present case also, as the appellant had closed and bolted the
door to prevent an escape of any person from the house, and
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had then brutally murdered as many as five persons, death
sentence should be imposed on the appellant.
9. We have considered the submissions of the learned
counsel for the parties and we find that the trial court has
recorded the following special reasons under Section 354 (3)
of the Criminal Procedure Code, 1898 for awarding the death
sentence on the appellant:
(i) The crime was pre-meditated.
(ii) The crime has struck fear and terror in the public
mind.
(iii) Helpless and defenceless women and two minor
children aged eight and four years besides two adult men
were murdered.
(iv) Asgar Ali, the driver of Shamim, who had only
stopped in the house for his food, was also not spared.
(v) Taking advantage of earlier business relations with
Shamim, the appellant made a friendly entry and committed
the murders.
(vi) The intention was to kill all members of the family
though surprisingly a six month old baby and a four year old
child remained alive.
(vii) The five murders were brutal, grotesque, diabolical,
revolting and dastardly, which indicated the criminality of
the perpetrators of the crime.
(viii) No physical or financial harm appears to have been
caused by the deceased to the accused.
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As against these aggravating circumstances, the trial court
did not find any mitigating circumstance in favour of the
appellant to avoid the death penalty. This is, therefore, not
one of those cases in which the trial court has not recorded
elaborate reasons for awarding death sentence to the
appellant as contended by learned counsel for the appellant.
10. Regarding the role of the appellant in the commission of
the offence of dacoity and murder, we have already found
that the turban and T-shirt of the appellant, which were
seized and sent for examination to the Forensic Science
Laboratory, had presence of human blood. We have also
found that the axe and the iron rod, which were recovered
pursuant to the statement of the appellant, had also blood-
stains. We have also found from the evidence of PW-1 that
when her mother was cooking food and came out on hearing
the commotion, the appellant was demanding money from
her father and her father gave to the appellant all the money
which he was having in his pocket. There is, therefore, clear
and definite evidence in this case to show that the appellant
not only participated in the crime, but also played the lead
role in the offence under Section 396, IPC. This is, therefore,
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not a case where it can be held that the role of the appellant
was not such as to warrant death sentence under Section
396, IPC.
11. In a recent judgment in Sunder Singh v. State of
Uttaranchal [(2010) 10 SCC 611], this Court found that the
accused had poured petrol in the room and set it to fire and
closed the door of the room when all the members of the
family were having their food inside the room and, as a
result, five members of the family lost their lives and the
sixth member of the family, a helpless lady, survived. This
Court held that the accused had committed the crime with
pre-meditation and in a cold blooded manner without any
immediate provocation from the deceased and all this was
done on account of enmity going on in respect of the family
lands and this was one of those rarest of rare cases in which
death sentence should be imposed. The facts in the present
case are no different. Five members of a family including two
minor children and the driver were ruthlessly killed by the
use of a knife, an axe and an iron rod and with the help of
four others. The crime was obviously committed after pre-
meditation with absolutely no consideration for human lives
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and for money. Even though the appellant was young, his
criminal propensities are beyond reform and he is a menace
to the society. The trial court and the High Court were
therefore right in coming to the conclusion that this is one of
those rarest of rare cases in which death sentence is the
appropriate punishment.
12. In the result, we find no merit in these appeals and we
sustain the conviction of the appellant as well as the
sentence of death under Section 396, IPC, and dismiss the
appeals.
.............................J.
(A. K. Patnaik)
.............................J.
(Swatanter Kumar)
New Delhi,
February 23, 2012.