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Khem Karan And Others v. The State Of U.p. And Another

Khem Karan And Others
v.
The State Of U.p. And Another

(Supreme Court Of India)

Criminal Appeal No. 40 Of 1971 | 08-04-1974


Krishna Iyer, J.

1. This appeal by special leave, by three out of twenty three, who alone were convicted by the High Court in reversal of a total acquittal by the trial court, turns on the propriety of the Court of Appeal convicting accused persons whose initial advantage of a presumption of innocence has been strengthened by a judicial affirmation at the first level.

2. The few facts are these. Two groups - the complainants and the accused - Have been on terms of bitter hostility - a background material which has legitimately induced both the courts to be very sceptical about the veracity of the prosecution witnesses in the absence of unlaying corroboration. As found by both the courts, a confrontation and exchange of violence occurred on June 22, 1964 each party calling the other aggressor. Anyway, several on the prosecution side did receive gunshot wounds, although luckily not fatal, and three among the accused bunch had on their person lathi blow injuries. The trial Judge disbelieved the version of the defence but found the PWs too partisan to pin his faith on, and in consequence acquitted everyone. The High Court agreed that unless the infirmity of interested testimony was cured by other credible evidence the fate of the case would be the same and on that basis dismissed the States appeal against all but the three appellants before us. Was this exceptional treatment justified (a) by the evidence, and (b) in the light of first courts acquittal

3. An encounter did take place and a case and counter-case ensued. The accused - Except a few who pleaded alibi in vain -claimed that they were attacked. Even the trial court has rejected this contention and fire High Court has held that, having regard to the number and nature of injuries and the number of persons who have been hit by the power, the accused were the attackers. We see no reason to disturb this conclusion. Even so, how could you hand-pick three out of twenty three for punishment The complainants plea is that when attacked by guns he and his men went at them, disarmed them and beat them with lathis. The convicted three have injuries which fit in with this version. The appellate Court has taken these injuries as corroborative of participation in the rioting and attempt to murder (read with S. 149, I.P.C.) charged against all the accused. The short question is whether these wounds bring home the guilt so strongly as to warrant upsetting of an earlier acquittal.

4. The principle of law is well settled that merely because a different view of the evidence is possible - minds differ as rivers differ - you cannot cancel a finding against guilt. But the appellant Court is untrammelled in its power to re-evaluate the evidence bearing in mind the seriousness of overthrowing an acquittal once recorded. In that view we cannot find any error of law in the High Court reconsidering the probative value of the oral and circumstantial evidence in the case. Nor are we persuaded to think that the appellate Court has failed to observed the built-in restraints on exercise of power while upsetting an acquittal. On the other hand, the Court has made the correct approach that only those accused against whom there was additional probative reinforcement could be convicted. So, it found that the injuries on the persons of the three appellants and the fact that Siya Ram, appellant No, 2, had a gun in his hands at the time of the occurrence were sufficient, together with the other evidence, to hold the appellants guilty.

5. We cannot part with this case without mentioning the serious error some subordinate courts commit in the application of the rule of benefit of reasonable doubt. For instance, in the present case the learned Sessions Judge has misguided himself by chasing bare possibilities of doubt and exalting them into sufficiently militating factors justifying acquittal. The following passage illustrates the grievous mistake of the learned Judge:

"I must concede that probabilities for such a situation are remote but possibilities cannot be ruled out. We have to see whether the incident took place in the manner as alleged by the prosecution or not. To inspire confidence of the Court the prosecution has to establish each link in its version beyond all doubts. When other links in the prosecution, as discussed above, have failed to inspire confidence, I think in such a case the benefit of doubt prevailing around the remaining links in the version must go to the accused.


Neither mere possibilities nor remote probabilities nor mere doubts which are not reasonable can without danger to the administration of justice be the foundation of the acquittal of an accused person, if there is otherwise fairly credible testimony. If a trial courts judgment verges on the perverse, the appellate court has a duty to set evaluation right and that is about all that has happened in this case.The High Court has given a large margin for reasonable doubt and confirmed the acquittal of a considerable number of the accused.

6. Although the surviving accused who have been convicted are only three, S. 149, and is any case S. 34, I.P.C. will rope in the appellants by way of constructive liability. This Court has, in Sukh Ram v. State of U. P., AIR 1974 SC 323 [LQ/SC/1973/369] = (1974 Cri LJ 354) held that the acquittal of two out of three named accused does not bar the conviction of the third under S. 302, read with S. 34, if he is shown to have committed the offence with unknown companions. As in that case, here also no possible prejudice can be claimed by the accused-appellants by the invocation of S. 34, I.P.C., even if twenty three have been acquitted. Moreover, this Court has in Bharwad Mepa Dana v. State of Bombay, (1960) 2 SCR 172 [LQ/SC/1959/204] = (AIR 1960 SC 289 [LQ/SC/1959/204] = 1960 Cri LJ 424) taken the view that nothing in law prevents the court from finding that the unlawful assembly consisted of less than five convicted persons and some unidentified persons together numbering more than five.In our view, the fact that a large number of accused have been acquitted and the remaining who have been convicted are less than five cannot vitiate the conviction under Section 149 read with the substantive offence if - as in this case the Court has taken care to find - there are other persons who might not have been identified or convicted but were party to the crime and together constituted the statutory number. On this basis, the conviction under S. 307, read with S. 149, has to be sustained.

7. What remains is the question of sentence. It is true that those assailants who did not receive injuries have escapted punishment and conviction has been clamped down on those who have sustained injuries in the course of the clash. It is equally true that those who have allegedly committed the substantive offences have jumped the gauntlet of the law and the appellants have been held guilty only constructively. We also notice that the case has been pending for around ten years and the accused must have been in jail for some time, a circumstance which is relevant under the new Criminal Procedure Code though it has come into operation only from April 1, 1974. Taking a conspectus of the various circumstances in the case, some of which are indicated above, we are satisfied that the ends of justice would be met by reducing the sentence to three years rigourous imprisonment under S. 307, read with S. 149, and one year rigourous imprisonment under S. 147, I.P.C. the two terms running concurrently. With this modification regarding sentence, we dismiss the appeal.

8. Sentence modified.

Advocates List

For the Appearing Parties R.L. Kholi, O.P. Rana, Advocates..

For Petitioner
  • Shekhar Naphade
  • Mahesh Agrawal
  • Tarun Dua
For Respondent
  • S. Vani
  • B. Sunita Rao
  • Sushil Kumar Pathak

Bench List

HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE M.H. BEG

HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE Y.V. CHANDRACHUD

HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE V.R. KRISHNA IYER

Eq Citation

(1974) 4 SCC 603

[1974] 3 SCR 863

1974 CRILJ 1033

(1974) SCC CRI 639

AIR 1974 SC 1567

(1974) 76 PLR 677

1974 (6) UJ 389

2 (1974) ACC 307

(1975) 1 MLJ (CRL) 78

LQ/SC/1974/142

HeadNote

to 3 yrs RI under S 307 r/w S 149 and 1 yr RI under S 147 IPC, both terms running concurrently, in view of delay in disposal of case and fact that those who had allegedly committed substantive offences had jumped the gauntlet of law and appellants had been held guilty only constructively, in a case of rioting and attempt to murder