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Rattan Singh v. State Of Himachal Pradesh

Rattan Singh
v.
State Of Himachal Pradesh

(Supreme Court Of India)

Criminal Appeal No. 509 of 1991 | 11-12-1996


THOMAS, J.

1. A young housewife (Kanta Devi) enceinte by four months, was shot at with a double-barrelled gun by an assailant who gatecrashed into her courtyard during the odd hours of the night when she was sleeping. The shoal of pellets spewed out of the mouth of the gun had pierced into her lungs and heart and she died instantaneously. The appellant - an ex-armyman - was challaned by the police for the said murder. The Sessions Court acquitted him but a Division Bench of the High Court of Himachal Pradesh, on appeal by the State, convicted him under Section 302 IPC and sentenced him to imprisonment for life. He has filed this appeal under Section 2 of the Supreme Court (Enlargement of Criminal Appellate Jurisdiction) Act, 1970 and also under Section 379 of the Code of Criminal Procedure.

2. The following is the story which prosecution has unfurled in the trial court :

Kanta Devi (aged 21) was married to Puran Chand and she was living with her in-laws in her husbands house at Bhali Village. Her husband was working in the Public Works Department and most often he was living away from his family. Her sister-in-law Sheela Devi (PW 10) though married was also residing in the same house. The appellant, after superannuation from military service had settled down in his home village. He obtained a licence for possession of Ex. P-1 - a gun. The appellant, in course of time developed some infatuation for Kanta Devi and he started doting on her with libidinous designs, but she was not willing to reciprocate his oglings. This negative response had burgeoned the seed of rancour in his mind towards Kanta Devi and thenceforth he started harassing her. When she found him incorrigible she complained to the police about his lewd conduct. This led to initiation of security proceedings against him during which his gun was seized by the authorities, but he secured it back by making an application through Advocate Prahalad Chand Sharma (PW 2). Nonetheless his bitterness towards her, instead of abating, was only brimming up. He made some unsuccessful attempts to retaliate though in one such attempt he could shoot down one of the pet dogs of her household.

3. On the night of 6-7-1982, all the inmates of Kanta Devis house were sleeping in the courtyard of the house. Her husband was, as usual absent from the house. At about 11.00 p.m. Kanta Devis mother-in-law woke up sensing that somebody had intruded into their privacy and asked others whether anyone was there. Suddenly, deceased Kanta Devi cried out that the appellant was standing there with a gun. This was followed by the sound of a gunshot and pellets had delved into her body. Kanta Devis brother-in-law Prakram Chand (PW 3) and his sister Sheela Devi (PW 10) pounced upon the appellant and in a bout Sheela Devi Succeeded in wresting the gun from him but the assailant made good his escape leaving his torchlight and chappals at the place of the incident. Kanta Devi slumped down to the cot and slouched her head.

4. Prakram Chand (PW 3) accompanied by two neighbours. PW-4 Piar Singh and PW-5 Sahib Singh (who rushed to the scene on hearing the hue and cry from the place of occurrence) proceeded to the police station, but on the way they came across the police party to whom Prakram Chand gave the first information statement (Ex.PD). Sub-Inspector of Police (PW 23) visited the scene in the morning and held the inquest, seized the gun and other articles. The appellant was later arrested and after completion of the investigation charge-sheeted him for the murder of Kanta Devi.

5. The appellant has denied his involvement in the incident which led to the death of Kanta Devi. However, he owned the gun produced in this case (Ex. P1) but he said that police had seized that gun from his house. He denied the allegation that he was ogling Kanta Devi and later developed acerbity towards her.

6. The Sessions Court made a scathing criticism on the investigating officer for his failure to trace out finger impressions on the torchlight. The learned Sessions Judge took a serious view of the omission in the first information statement that Sheela Devi (PW 10) snatched the gun from the appellant. On that score the learned Sessions Judge disbelieved the entire testimony of Sheela Devi (PW 10) as well as Prakram Chand (PW 3). He side-stepped all the incriminating circumstances against the appellant and gave him a clean chit and permitted him to be armed with the gun again.

7. The Division Bench of the High Court has totally differed from the Sessions Court and relied on the testimony of Sheela Devi (PW 10) as well as her brother Prakram Chand (PW 3). The High Court did not take the omission in the first information statement (regarding wresting the gun) seriously as it did not cause any dent on the otherwise sturdy prosecution nutshell. The High Court treated the reasoning of the Sessions Judge for sidelining the evidence of two important witnesses as exceedingly unreasonable.

8. Learned counsel for the appellant did not dispute the fact that Kanta Devi was shot dead on the night of 6-7-1982 at her house. So the only question is whether it was the appellant who did it.

9. Learned counsel for the appellant made an endeavour to persuade us to concur with the Sessions Judges view that the omission (in the first information statement) regarding wresting of the gun from appellant is enough to conclude that the said part of the story is a later improvement. Omission of the said detail is there in the first information statement, no doubt. But criminal courts should not be fastidious with mere omissions in the first information statement, since such statements cannot be expected to be a chronicle of every detail of what happened, nor to contain an exhaustive catalogue of the events detail of what happened, nor to contain an exhaustive catalogue of the events which took place. The person who furnishes first information to authorities might be fresh with the fact but he need not necessarily have the skill or ability to reproduce details of the entire story without anything missing therefrom. Some may miss even important details in a narration. Quite often the police officer, who takes down the first information, would record what the informant conveys to him without resorting to any elicitatory exercise. It is voluntary narrative of the informant without interrogation which usually goes into such statement. So any omission therein has to be considered along with the other evidence to determine whether the fact so omitted never happened at all. (Vide Pedda Narayana v. State of Andhra Pradesh, 1975 AIR(SC) 1252; Sone Lal v. State of Uttar Pradesh, 1978 AIR(SC) 1142; Gurnam Kaur v. Bakshish Singh, 1981 AIR(SC) 631).

10. In this case, there is overwhelming evidence that the gun was lying near the dead body, even apart from the evidence of PW 3 and PW 5. The two neighbours who reached the spot on hearing the cry were Piar Singh (PW 4) and Sahib Singh (PW 5). Both of them said that when they reached the place they saw Kanta Devi lying dead and a gun, a torchlight and a pair of slippers were lying on the same site. Nothing has been elicited from these witnesses during cross-examination to doubt the truth of their testimony. That apart, PW 6, PW 7 and PW 8 who were present when the Sub-Inspector (PW 23) prepared the inquest have unequivocally said that the gun was lying in the courtyard where the dead body of Kanta Devi remained. We have, therefore, no difficulty in believing that the gun would have been wrested from the assailant at the spot itself.

11. One of the most important items of evidence in this case is what the deceased had uttered immediately before she was fired at. When her mother-in-law sensed that somebody had intruded in the courtyard during the odd hours, the deceased (near whom the intruder was standing then) spoke out that appellant was standing nearby with a gun. In a split second the sound of firearm shot was heard and in trice the life of Kanta Devi was snuffed off.

12. If the said statement had been made when the deceased was under expectation of death it becomes dying declaration in evidence after her death. Nonetheless, even if she was nowhere near expectation of death, still the statement would become admissible under Section 32(1) of the Evidence Act, though not as dying declaration as such, provided it satisfies one of the two conditions set forth in the sub-section. This is probably the one distinction between English law and the law in India on dying declaration. In English law, unless the declarant is under expectation of death his statement cannot acquire the passport of admissibility, (Sharad Birdhichand Sarda v. State of Maharashtra 1984 AIR(SC) 1622; Tehal Singh v. State of Punjab, 1979 AIR(SC) 1347).

13. Section 32(1) of the Evidence Act renders a statement relevant which was made by a person who is dead in cases in which cause of his death comes into question, but its admissibility depends upon one of the two conditions : Either such statement should relate to the cause of his death or it should relate to any of the circumstances of transaction which resulted in his death.

14. Three aspects have to be considered pertaining to the above item of evidence. First is whether the said statement of the deceased would fall within Section 32(1) of the Evidence Act so as to become admissible in evidence. Second is whether what the witnesses have testified in Court regarding the utterance of the deceased can be believed to be true. If the above two aspects are found in the affirmative, the third aspect to be considered is whether the deceased would have correctly identified the assailant

15. When Kanta Devi (deceased) made the statement that appellant was standing with a gun she might or might not have been under the expectation of death. But that does not matter. The fact spoken by the deceased has subsequently turned out to be a circumstance which intimately related to the transaction which resulted in her death. The collocation of the words in Section 32(1) "circumstances of the transaction which result in his death" is apparently of wider amplitude than saying "circumstances which caused his death". There need not necessarily be a direct nexus between "circumstances" and death. It is enough if the words spoken by the deceased have reference to any circumstance which has connection with any of the transactions which ended up in the death of the deceased. Such statement would also fall within the purview of Section 32(1) of Evidence Act. In other words, it is not necessary that such circumstance should be proximate, for even distant circumstances can also become admissible under the sub-section, provided it has nexus with the transaction which resulted in the death. In Sharad Birdhichand Sardas case 1984 AIR(SC) 1622) (cited supra) this Court has stated the above principle in the following words (para 21) :

"The test of proximity cannot be too literally construed and practically reduced to a cut-and-dried formula of universal application so as to be confined in a strait-jacket. Distance of time would depend or vary with the circumstances of each case. For instance, where death is a logical culmination of a continuous drama long in process and is, as it were, a final of the story, the statement regarding each step directly connected with the end of the drama would be admissible because the entire statement would have to be read as an organic whole and not torn from the context. Sometimes statements relevant to or furnishing an immediate motive may also be admissible as being a part of the transaction of death." *


16. Even apart from Section 32(1) of the Evidence Act, the aforesaid statement of Kanta Devi can be admitted under Section 6 of the Evidence Act on account of its proximity of time to the act of murder. Illustration A to Section 6 makes it clear. It reads thus :-

"A is accused of the murder of B by beating him. Whatever was said or done by A or B or the bystanders at the beating, or so shortly before or after it as to form part of the transaction, is a relevant fact." *


Here the act of the assailant intruding into the courtyard during dead of the night, victims identification of the assailant, her pronouncement that appellant was standing with a gun and his firing the gun at her, are all circumstances so intertwined with each other by proximity of time and space that the statement of the deceased became part of the same transaction. Hence it is admissible under Section 6 of the Evidence Act.

17. In either case, whether it is admissible under Section 32(1) or under Section 6 of the Evidence Act, it is substantive evidence which can be acted upon with or without corroboration in finding guilt of the accused.

18. But then the court must be assured of the remaining two aspects i.e. reliability of the evidence and accuracy of the contents of the pronouncement. We have no difficulty in believing that Kanta Devi would have said so. Both PW 3 and PW 10 have spoken about this in their evidence. Further PW 3 has mentioned about it even at the earliest opportunity when he gave the first information statement. As to the question whether Kanta Devi would have correctly identified the appellant, it was contended that it was when dark and there was shadow of a mango tree and hence she could not have identified him correctly. The evidence shows that it was a moonlight night and it happened on the open courtyard. The gunning down was followed by a bout between the assailant on the one side and PW 3 and PW 10 on the other during which these witnesses also had occasion to identify the assailant at a very close range. Further again, Ex. P-1 fun which PW 10 Sheela Devi succeeded in wresting from the appellant is admittedly the gun of the appellant.

19. From the above circumstances we can unhesitatingly come to the conclusion that Kanta Devi had correctly identified the appellant when she said that it was the appellant who was standing with a gun.

20. Learned counsel for the appellant tried to make out much from the fact that no finger impression of Sheela Devi was found on the gun. We do not find any consequence on account of it in this case. In fact, the appellant did not seriously dispute when the trial Judge put the question to him regarding that circumstance during his examination under Section 313 of the Code of Criminal Procedure (question No. 25 related to the evidence that gun was produced by Sheela Devi and was taken into possession by the police. The answer given by the appellant to that question was "I do not Know"). Examination of the accused under Section 313 of the Code is not a mere formality. Answers given by the accused to the questions put to him during such examination have a practical utility for criminal courts. Apart from affording an opportunity to the delinquent to explain incriminating circumstances against him, they would help the court in appreciating the entire evidence adduced in the court during trial. Ex. P1 - gun - admittedly belongs to the assailant. Therefore, when PW 10 said in court that she succeeded in snatching it from the assailant and she surrendered it to the police, we see no reason to disbelieve her, particularly in view of the evasive answer given by the appellant to the question concerned.21. We have no doubt that the Division Bench of the High Court has salvaged criminal justice in this case by interfering with the unmerited acquittal emerged from a perverse approach made by the Sessions Court. We, therefore, confirm the conviction and sentence passed on the appellant and dismiss the appeal.

21. Appeal dismissed.

Advocates List

Suman Kapoor, Pankaj Kalra, Avatar Singh Rawat, T. Sridharan, T. A. Khan, Advocates.

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

Bench List

HON'BLE JUSTICE DR. A. S. ANAND

HON'BLE JUSTICE K. T. THOMAS

Eq Citation

AIR 1997 SC 768

(1997) 4 SCC 161

1997 CRILJ 833

1996 9 AD (SC) 628

1997 (1) ALD (CRL) 410

1997 (1) RCR (CRIMINAL) 550

1997 (1) RLW 73 (SC)

JT 1996 (11) SC 218

1996 (9) SCALE 258

1996 (4) CRIMES 282

1 (1997) CCR 107

(1997) SCC (CRI) 525

LQ/SC/1996/2174

HeadNote

- A young housewife, Kanta Devi, was shot and killed by an ex-armyman, the appellant, during the night at her home. - The prosecution asserted that the appellant was infatuated with Kanta Devi and developed animosity towards her when she rejected his advances. - The appellant obtained a gun license and harassed Kanta Devi, leading to a police complaint and the seizure of the gun. - On the night of the incident, the appellant entered Kanta Devi's house and shot her with a double-barrelled gun. - Kanta Devi identified the appellant before she died and her sister-in-law, Sheela Devi, wrestled the gun from him. - The Sessions Court acquitted the appellant due to the omission of the gun-snatching incident in the first information statement and for failing to trace fingerprints on the torchlight. - The High Court reversed the acquittal, holding that the omission was not fatal and relied on the testimony of Sheela Devi and other eyewitnesses. - The Supreme Court upheld the High Court's decision, finding overwhelming evidence against the appellant, including the dying declaration of Kanta Devi. - The Court discussed the admissibility of the dying declaration under Section 32(1) of the Evidence Act and held that it was relevant as a circumstance connected to the transaction resulting in Kanta Devi's death. - The Court concluded that Kanta Devi could correctly identify her assailant despite the dark conditions, considering the moonlight, open courtyard setting, and subsequent identification by eyewitnesses. - The Court dismissed the appellant's contention regarding the lack of Sheela Devi's fingerprints on the gun, noting the appellant's evasive answer during his examination under Section 313 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. - The Supreme Court upheld the appellant's conviction and sentence for murder, stating that the High Court had salvaged criminal justice by overturning the unmerited acquittal.