15 February 2019
Supreme Court
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KRIPAL SINGH Vs THE STATE OF RAJASTHAN

Bench: HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE A.M. KHANWILKAR, HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE AJAY RASTOGI
Judgment by: HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE A.M. KHANWILKAR
Case number: Crl.A. No.-002100-002100 / 2008
Diary number: 13917 / 2008
Advocates: PRATIBHA JAIN Vs


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NON­REPORTABLE

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA                      CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION

      CRIMINAL APPEAL NO(s). 2100 OF 2008

KRIPAL SINGH      ….Appellant(s)

VERSUS

STATE OF RAJASTHAN       ….Respondent(s)

J U D G M E N T

Rastogi, J.

1. This appeal has been filed against the judgment and order

dated 4th February, 2008 passed by the High Court of Judicature

of  Rajasthan at Jaipur Bench confirming the conviction of  the

appellant for the offence punishable under Section 302 IPC

passed by the learned trial Court under the impugned judgment

dated 22nd November, 2002.

2. The brief facts as per the prosecution case are that on 28th

July, 2001, at 9.15 p.m. informant Sunil  Kumar Goyal(PW­13)

submitted a written report(Exh. P­1) at Police Station Dug

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wherein it was stated that around 6.30 p.m., he was going along

with his brother Yashwant and Paras Mal on motor cycle bearing

no.            RJ­20 8M 9309 to their agricultural farm situated at

village Doodhlai.   Yashwant was on the driving seat, Paras

Mal(PW­1)  was  in the  middle  and  the informant  Sunil  Kumar

Goyal(PW­13) was sitting on the rear seat. While they were

returning back, the accused  Kripal Singh along  with  Ramlal,

Arjun Singh and Sultan Singh  met them  near the house of

Dhoole Singh.   All the four were armed with axe, lathi, dharia,

sword and pharsa surrounded their motor cycle and exhorted to

kill Yashwant.   Informant Sunil Kumar Goyal(PW­13) and Paras

Mal(PW­1) got down and distanced themselves but Yashwant

could not do so and was severely beaten up.   All the assailants

inflicted blows with axe, dharia, sword, pharsa and lathi on the

person of Yashwant.   They attempted to kill even the informant

Sunil Kumar Goyal(PW­13) and Paras Mal(PW­1) while they were

running for their  life.  They were chased by Kripal Singh who

gave a blow with axe on the left shoulder of Paras Mal(PW­1).  On

the complaint  made by Sunil Kumar Goyal(PW­13), the first

information report(Exh. P2) came to be registered.   Autopsy on

the dead body of deceased Yaswant was conducted.  Initially, all

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the four accused persons, namely, Kripal Singh, Ram Lal, Arjun

Singh and  Sultan  Singh  were arrested and on completion of

investigation, charge­sheet was filed and charges under Sections

302, 394, 394/34, 324 or 324/34 IPC were framed against them

who denied the charges and claimed trial.   The prosecution in

support  of its  case  examined as  many as  24  witnesses.  The

appellant claimed innocence in the  explanation  under  Section

313 CrPC, three witnesses in support of defence were examined

and learned trial Court after hearing acquitted co­accused

persons namely,  Ram Lal,  Arjun Singh and Sultan Singh and

convicted the appellant and sentenced him under Sections 302,

204, 394 and 324 IPC.   Against conviction & sentence, accused

appellant preferred appeal & the State of Rajasthan also

preferred appeal against acquittal of the other three accused

persons, both the appeals were dismissed affirming the judgment

of the trial  Court vide  judgment  impugned dated 4th  February,

2008.

3. Against  the said  judgment, this  appeal  by way of  special

leave has been filed.

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4. Heard Mr.  Sushil  Kumar Jain,  learned senior counsel for

the appellant and Ms. Ruchi Kohli, learned counsel for the State.

5. The  main emphasis of Mr. Sushil Kumar Jain, learned

senior counsel for the appellant is that PW­13 Sunil Kumar Goyal

was the sole eye witness on whose statement conviction has been

recorded and the present appellant has been assigned only an

injury on the head of the deceased Yashwant which is not the

only cause of death as per the statement of PW­6 Dr. Bhupesh

Dayal and PW­7 Dr. Ramesh Chandra Khatik and further

submitted that after the acquittal of other three accused persons

namely Ram Lal, Arjun and Sultan Singh who too inflicted

injuries on the various parts of the body of the deceased

Yashwant, the appellant alone cannot be held guilty of causing

the fatal injury and conviction under Section 302 IPC cannot be

sustained  and he at the  most is liable to  be  convicted  under

Section 304 Part I or II IPC.

6. Learned senior counsel further submits that conviction of

the  appellant is  only  based  on the  statement  of  PW­13 Sunil

Kumar  Goyal who has been disbelieved qua the other three

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accused persons, namely, Ram Lal, Arjun Singh and Sultan

Singh by the learned trial Court as well as by the High Court.

The High Court has come to the conclusion that the three co­

accused persons namely Ram Lal, Arjun Singh and Sultan Singh

were falsely implicated for the various reasons and presence of

these co­accused persons at the time of the incident itself was

doubtful at least based on the statement of PW­13 Sunil Kumar

Goyal  who was highly interested and unreliable witness and on

whose statement, at least the appellant could not have been held

guilty and convicted under Section 302 IPC.   

7. Learned senior counsel further submits that the conviction

of the  appellant  on  the  sole ocular testimony  of  PW­13 Sunil

Kumar Goyal is otherwise not sustainable for the reason that the

material portion of the prosecution case with regard to the

manner of the incident and the injuries assigned to various other

alleged accused persons, namely, Ram Lal, Arjun Singh and

Sultan Singh has been disbelieved and the very genesis of  the

incident  is itself  doubtful  and  in  the given circumstances, the

learned trial Court and the High Court has committed a serious

manifest error in holding conviction of the appellant based on the

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testimony of PW­13 whose sole testimony was not believed with

regard to the material portion of the prosecution case as alleged

in the first information report and the statement of witnesses and

in support thereof placed reliance on the judgment of this Court

in  Hari Kishan  Vs.  State of Haryana  2010(2) SCC 131 and

Arshad Hussain Vs. State of Rajasthan 2013(14) SCC 104 and

submits that once the substantial part of the prosecution story

has been disbelieved and the conviction of the appellant  rests

solely on the testimony of Sunil Kumar  Goyal(PW­13) whose

statement otherwise  lose credibility, it  will  not  be sufficient to

hold conviction under Section 302 IPC and further submits that

the cause of death is the common factor for all the injuries

assigned to  four accused persons out of  which three of them,

namely, Ram Lal, Arjun Singh and Sultan Singh have been

acquitted and in the statement of Dr. Bhupesh Dayal(PW­6) and

Dr. Ramesh Chandra Khatik(PW­7), it is clearly stated that cause

of death of the deceased Yashwant  was due to shock  which

occurred due to haemorrhage because of the injuries inflicted in

the brain  which  has been recorded even in the post­mortem

report(Exh. 33).   In the given facts and circumstances, it could

not be established that the fatal injury was caused by the

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appellant and he could not have been convicted under Section

302 IPC.

8. Learned senior  counsel further  submits that  the recovery

memos of axe(Exh. 40), dhoti(Exh. 36) and motorcycle(Exh. 51)

has been attested by the police personnel with no independent

witnesses i.e. PW 15 Dhara Singh and PW 22 Raghuveer Singh

for axe and Birdhi Chand, SHO(PW­20) and Shafiq

Mohammed(Head Constable)  PW­23  for  motor  cycle  have  been

produced to attest the said recoveries and a presumption with

regard to statement  by  police officer as independent evidence

cannot be presumed under Section 114 of the Evidence Act.

9. Learned counsel Ms. Ruchi Kohli, for the respondent, on the

other hand, submitted that although the State has not preferred

any appeal against the acquittal of other accused persons but in

the light of evidence adduced by the prosecution assigning the

specific role of the appellant, no error has been committed by the

High Court in confirming his conviction and prays for dismissal

of the appeal.  Learned counsel submits that the testimony of the

eye­witness  Sunil  Kumar  Goyal(PW­13) is reliable  and  he  has

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withstood the same in his cross­examination as well which has

been discussed in detail by the learned trial Court and also by

the High Court as well and needs no further re­appraisal of the

evidence and further submits that what is being stated by the

eye­witness  Sunil  Kumar  Goyal(PW­13) is corroborated  by the

medical evidence of PW­6  Dr. Bhupesh  Dayal and PW­7  Dr.

Ramesh Chandra Khatik who have conducted the autopsy on the

body of the deceased Yashwant and who, in their cross­

examination, has stated that the injury caused to deceased

Yashwant by the accused appellant was sufficient to cause death.

Learned counsel further submits that although Paras Mal(PW­1­

injured) was turned hostile but still it proves the presence of the

accused and the deposition of Sunil  Kumar Goyal(PW­13)  that

the  accused  hit the  deceased  Yashwant  on  his  head  and the

injury on the shoulder of Paras Mal(PW­1) is also being supported

by the medical evidence on record and apart from the

corroboration of the medical evidence, the recovery of axe(Exh.P­

40) at the behest of the accused appellant from his house has

been proved by Dhara Singh(PW­15) and Raghuveer Singh(PW­

22) and recovery of Motorcycle of the deceased has been proved

by Birdhi Chand SHO(PW­20) & Shafiq Mohammed(Head

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Constable)(PW­23) in their respective statements and merely

because they are the police witnesses, their evidence cannot be

disregarded as unworthy and placed reliance on the judgment of

this Court in Baldev Singh Vs. State of Haryana 2015(17) SCC

554 and Girja Prasad(Dead) by LRs Vs.  State of M.P. 2007(7)

SCC 625 and submits that the High Court was justified in

upholding the conviction of the appellant.

10. In order to appreciate the rival submission of the parties, it

may  be  apposite to refer the first information report(Exh.  P2)

made by Sunil Kumar Goyal(PW­13) which reads as under:­

“Today at about 6­30 O’clock in the evening as usual my elder brother Yashwant Kumar, Parasmal ji son of Shri Sobhagmal ji and I in my Hero Honda Motorcycle, the number of which is RJ20­8M 9309 and LOVE is written in English on the backside number plate, we three went to village Dudhlai village to look after our agricultural farm.  After staying there for about an hour when we are coming back via Dudhlai village, we met  these  four persons,  namely Kripal  singh,  son of Than Singh, caste Rajput, resident of Dudhlai, 2. Ramlal, son of Anar singh ji, caste Rajput, resident of Mandpur, 3. Arjun Singh, son of Bheru Singh, caste Rajput, resident of Padla, 4. Sultan Singh, son of Bheru Singh, caste Rajput, resident of Padla in front of the house of Dule Singh.  Kripal singh was having axe and Ramlal was having a lathi fitted with Dharia, Sultan Singh was having sword and Arjun Singh was having farsa.  On seeing us they said that today do not allow Yaswant  Singh  to  go  alive today.  Got  a  good opportunity today.  Saying this, these four surrounded us.   Seeing this Paras and I got down from the motorcycle.   When my brother Yashwant ji, who was

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driving the motorcycle, when wanted to get down Kripal Singh hit axe on his head. After that Ramlal hit the lathi fitted with Dharia above the left eye and Arjun Singh gave blow with his sword on his neck.   Sultan Singh hit the lathi fitted with farsa on the head.  While we  were standing there they stated that these two should not be left alive.  Then we ran away from there. While fleeing Kripal Singh gave a blow with his axe on the left shoulder of Parasmal ji.   We two in order to save our lives when ran towards the field, Kripal Singh took my motorcycle and chased us.  In the dark we hid ourselves in the field.   After some time everything became quite there.   We went there and saw that my brother Yashwant had died because of serious injuries on his body.  Those four persons killed my brother and took away my Hero Honda Motorcycle No. RJ 8M 9309, the colour of which is Maroon.   These persons committed this criminal act on account of our old enmity in connection of our lands.  Report is submitted for appropriate action.”

11. On scrutinising the content of the first information report

recorded by Sunil Kumar Goyal(PW­13), it is clear that the

occurrence took place on 28th  July, 2001 at around 6.30 p.m.

when the  informant Sunil  Kumar Goyal(PW­13) along with his

brother Yashwant and Paras Mal were returning back on a motor

cycle  from their  agricultural farm situated at Village Doodhlai,

they  met the present accused appellant along  with  Ram Lal,

Arjun Singh and Sultan Singh near the house of Dhoole Singh.

All the four were armed with axe, lathi, dharia, sword and

pharsa.  The  informant  Sunil  Kumar Goyal(PW­13)  and Paras

Mal(PW­1) got down and distanced themselves but deceased

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Yashwant could not do so and the accused inflicted blows with

axe, dharia, sword, pharsa and lathi on the person of the

deceased Yashwant.   The accused appellant chased Paras

Mal(PW­1) and gave blow with axe on his shoulder.  The analysis

of the evidence came on record and the learned trial Court after

hearing acquitted the other accused persons, namely, Ram Lal,

Arjun Singh and Sultan Singh and held the present appellant

guilty under Section 302 IPC and sentenced him to life

imprisonment and the appeal preferred by the appellant came to

be dismissed by the High Court under the impugned judgment

dated 4th February, 2008.

12. Before we proceed to examine the rival submissions of the

parties, it will be apposite to take note of post­mortem report on

the body of the deceased Yashwant which is as under:­

1. Incised wound 4” x 2” x cervical vertebrae deep ocrophagus trachea & CS vertebrae tractmend present on the anterior side of neck at the level of thyroid region.

2. Incised wound 3” x 2” x muscle deep sustained on the right side of base of neck.  

3. Incised wound 2 ½ ” x 1” x muscle deep present on the right shoulder.

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4. Incised wound 7” x 1” x muscle deep sustained on the front of neck just below the thyroid region.

5. Incised wound 6” x 1 ½” x muscle deep sustained just below the ramus of left mandible.

6. Incised wound 3” x 1” x brain deep sustained on the left side of  forehead just above the left eye brow, bone cut and brain matter present.

7. Incised wound 4” x 1 ½” x brain deep sustained on the left parietal region of the scalp, bone cut and brain matter present.

8. Incised wound 2 ½ ” x 1” x bone deep sustained on the right temporal region of the scalp bone cut & brain matter present.

9. Incised wound 1 ½” x ½” x brain deep sustained on the upper half of right ear pinna.   Mastoid process cut and brain matter present.

13. We also find that Paras Mal(PW­1) was related to the

informant Sunil Kumar Goyal(PW­13).  The allegation against the

appellant is that he inflicted injuries on the person of deceased

Yashwant and Paras Mal(PW­1) and took away the motor cycle of

deceased Yashwant which was recovered in the presence of

Birdhi Chand SHO Ganganagar P.S.(PW­20) and Shafiq

Mohammed, Head Constable(PW­23).  The axe(Exh. P40) was also

recovered in the presence of Dhara Singh, Constable(PW­15) and

Raghuveer Singh(PW­22).   Although Paras Mal(PW­1) who

sustained injury in the incident, did not support the  prosecution

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and he was declared hostile but his medical legal report (MLR)

indicates that he too was injured by the present accused

appellant in the alleged incident.  

14. The emphasis of  Mr. Sushil  Kumar Jain, learned senior

counsel for the appellant that the appellant has been assigned

only one injury on the head of the deceased Yashwant which is

not  only  the cause of  death and when the statement of  Sunil

Kumar Goyal(PW­13) has been partially disbelieved qua the other

three co­accused persons who are actively shown in participating

in the commission of crime and who have been acquitted by the

learned trial Court and confirmed by the High Court on dismissal

of the appeal preferred by the State of Rajasthan, no credibility

be attached and on the same set of evidence, the appellant could

not have been held guilty and his conviction under Section 302

IPC needs interference of this Court.

15. We have already noted the contents of the first information

report and the conclusions of the  High Court upholding the

conviction of the appellant under Section 302 IPC.   The ocular

witness relied upon by the prosecution is Sunil Kumar Goyal(PW­

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13), the  complainant/informant.  A perusal  of the evidence of

Sunil  Kumar Goyal(PW­13) shows that he supported what was

contended by him on  which the first information report  was

registered and his court statement as PW­13 was in conformity

with the contents of the first information report.  In other words,

he reiterated what he has stated in the first information report.

It was specifically deposed by him that on 28th July, 2001, i.e. at

6.30  p.m., he along  with  his   brothers Paras  Mal(PW­1) and

Yashwant(deceased) were returning back on the motor cycle from

their agricultural farm situated  at  Village  Doodhlai and  while

they were returning back on the motor cycle near the house of

Dhoole Singh, they met Kripal Singh(appellant) with three other

persons namely, Ram Lal, Arjun Singh and Sultan Singh.   The

accused appellant  was  having  axe  and he hit  on  the  head of

deceased Yashwant and while returning back, accused appellant

hit axe on the shoulder of Paras Mal(PW­1).  There was a recovery

of axe and  motor cycle of the deceased Yashwant by  Dhara

Singh(PW­15) and Raghuveer Singh(PW­22) and the injury was

supported by Dr. Bhupesh Dayal(PW­6) and Dr. Ramesh

Chandra Khatik(PW­7) who conducted the autopsy on the body of

the deceased Yashwant.   The statement of the doctors was read

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over to us who in their deposition stated that the injuries were

inflicted on the person of the deceased before his death.   Injury

no.  1  which  was  caused  on the  neck  and throat  and  all the

injuries caused on the head were separately sufficient to cause

death of the injured.  In the statement of Sunil Kumar Goyal(PW­

13), the injury on the head of the deceased has been specifically

attributed to the accused appellant by axe.  The prosecution has

proved the case against the present accused appellant beyond

reasonable  doubt that  the  injury on the head of the deceased

which was attributed to the accused appellant could in itself be

sufficient to cause death and this is what has been considered by

the learned trial Court and confirmed by the  High  Court in

appeal and  we too are of the view that the prosecution  has

believed the case against the appellant and the possibility of over­

implication of co­accused Ram Lal, Arjun Singh and Sultan Singh

would not in any  manner rule out the case of the present

appellant and the prosecution  has proved beyond reasonable

doubt holding him guilty.   It would have been unreasonable on

our part  if  we could have mechanically rejected such evidence

available on record on the sole ground that it is partisan would

invariably lead to failure of justice.  No hard­and­fast rule can be

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laid down as to how much evidence should be appreciated but

what is required is that judicial approach has to be cautious in

dealing  with such evidence; but the plea that such evidence

should be rejected because it is partisan cannot be accepted as

correct.   This has been considered by this Court in  Rizan and

Another  Vs.  State of Chhatisgarh through the Chief

Secretary, Government of Chhatisgarh, Raipur, Chattisgarh

2003(2) SCC 661 at para 12 as under:­

“12. Stress was laid by the accused­appellants on the non­acceptance of evidence tendered by some witnesses  to  contend about desirability to  throw out the entire  prosecution case. In essence,  prayer is to apply the principle of  falsus in uno falsus in omnibus (false in one  thing, false in  everything).  This  plea is clearly untenable. Even if a major portion of evidence is found to be deficient,  in case residue is sufficient to prove guilt of an accused, notwithstanding acquittal of a number of other co­ accused persons, his conviction can be  maintained. It is the duty of the Court to separate the grain from the chaff. Where the chaff can be separated from the grain, it would be open to the Court to convict an accused notwithstanding the fact that evidence has been found to be deficient to prove guilt of other accused persons. Falsity of a particular material witness or material particular would not ruin it from the beginning to end. The maxim falsus in uno falsus in omnibus has no application in India and the witnesses cannot be branded as liars. The maxim falsus in uno falsus in omnibus  has not received general acceptance nor has this maxim come to occupy the status of a rule of law. It is  merely a rule of caution.   All that it amounts to, is that in such cases testimony may be disregarded, and not that it must be disregarded. The doctrine merely involves the question of weight of  evidence which a Court  may apply  in a

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given set of circumstances, but it is not what may be called “a  mandatory rule  of  evidence”.   (Nisar  Ali v. State of U. P. AIR 1957 SC 366).  Merely because some of the accused persons have been acquitted, though evidence against all of them, so far as direct testimony went, was the same does not lead as a necessary corollary that those who have been convicted must also be acquitted. It is always open to a Court to differentiate accused who had been acquitted from those who were convicted.  (Gurcharan Singh v. State of Punjab AIR 1956 SC 460).  The doctrine is a dangerous one, specially in India for if a whole body of the testimony were to be rejected, because a witness was evidently speaking an untruth in some aspect, it is to be feared that administration of criminal justice would come  to  a  dead­stop.  Witnesses just cannot  help in giving embroidery to a story, however, true in the main. Therefore, it has to be appraised in each case as to what extent the evidence  is worthy of acceptance, and merely because in some respects the Court considers the same to be insufficient for placing reliance on the testimony of a  witness, it does not necessarily follow as a matter of law that it must be disregarded in all respects as well. The evidence has to be shifted  with care.  The  aforesaid  dictum  is  not a sound rule for the reason that one hardly comes across a witness whose evidence does not contain a grain of untruth or at any rate exaggeration, embroideries or embellishment. (Sohrab v. State of M. P. 1972(3) SCC 751 and Ugar Ahir v. State of Bihar AIR 1965 SC 277). An attempt has to be made to, as noted above, in terms of the felicitous metaphor, separate the grain from the chaff, truth from falsehood. Where it is not feasible to separate truth from falsehood, because the grain and the chaff are inextricably mixed up, and in the process of separation an absolutely new case has to be reconstructed by divorcing essential details presented by the prosecution completely from the context and the background against  which they are  made, the only available course to be made is to discard the evidence in toto. (Zwinglee Ariel v. State of M. P. AIR 1954 SC 15 and Balaka Singh v. State of Punjab 1975(4) SCC 511). As observed  by this  Court in  State of  Rajasthan v. Kalki  1981(2) SCC 752 normal discrepancies in evidence are those which are due to normal errors of observation, normal errors of memory due to lapse of time,  due to  mental disposition such  as shock  and

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horror at the time of occurrence and those are always there, however honest and truthful a witness may be. Material discrepancies are those which are not normal, and not expected of a normal person. Courts have to label the  category into  which  a  discrepancy  may  be categorized. While normal discrepancies do not corrode the credibility of a party’s case, material discrepancies do so. These aspects were highlighted recently in Krishna Mochi  v.  State of  Bihar 2002(6)  SCC 81 and Gangadhar Behera v. State of Orissa 2002(8) SCC 381. Accusations have been clearly established against the accused­appellants in the  case  at  hand.  The  Courts below have  categorically indicated the  distinguishing features in evidence so far as the acquitted and convicted accused are concerned.”

16. It was further held in Vutukuru Lakshmaiah Vs. State of  

Andhra Pradesh 2015(11) SCC 102 as under:­

“23. At this juncture, it is worthy to note that the High Court has acquitted A­4, A­8 and A­9 on the foundation that they have been falsely implicated. Learned senior counsel for the appellants has contended that when the appellate court had acquitted the said accused persons, there was no warrant to sustain the conviction of other accused persons. On a perusal of the judgment of appellate court, we find that the judgment of acquittal has been recorded on the score that the names of A­8 and A­9 do not find mention in the evidence of PWs 1 to 3. On a similar basis, A­4 has been acquitted. Suffice it to mention here because the High Court has acquitted A­4, A­8 and A­9, that would not be a ground to discard the otherwise reliable dying declaration, for the evidence in entirety vividly show the involvement of the appellant­accused.”

17. The submission of the learned senior counsel for the

appellant that recovery has not been proved by any independent

witness is of no substance for the reason that in the absence of

independent witness to support the recovery in substance cannot

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be ignored unless proved to the contrary. There is no such legal

proposition that the evidence of police officials unless supported

by independent witness is unworthy of acceptance or the

evidence of police officials can be outrightly disregarded.

18. The judgments on which the reliance has been placed by

learned senior counsel for the appellant in  Hari Kishan’s

case(supra) and  Arshad Hussain’s case(supra) may not be of

any assistance for the reason that earlier was a case where there

was a serious dispute when the incident took place and that was

not even supported  by the  medical evidence  which  has been

referred to in paragraph 31 of the judgment which is as under:­

“31.  Summing up the discussions  made above,  we have before us a case where a substantial part of the prosecution story has been disbelieved and the conviction of the appellant rests solely on the testimony of  Harkesh (PW 2)  who does  not  seem  to have particular  respect for truth as observed by the trial court. His credibility as an eyewitness lay only in that the trial court and the High Court assumed that he  had received injuries in the same  occurrence in which Dinesh was killed. As shown above that assumption does not appear to be very sound and is not borne out by the evidences on record. In such a situation, we find it highly unsafe to uphold and sustain the appellant's conviction for the offence of murder. To us, it appears that the prudent and safe course would be to give him the benefit of doubt.”

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19. In Arshad Hussain’s case(supra), it was a case where the

prosecution supressed the genesis and the manner in which the

incident took  place and that  was  not even supported  by the

nature of the weapon used and there were lot of discrepancies

pointed out in the case set up by the prosecution of which details

have  been referred to in  paragraphs 17  to  19.  That  was  the

reason for which the partial statement of the witnesses could not

have been relied upon and as already observed, there cannot be

hard­and­fast rule that can be laid down and each case has to be

examined on its own facts.  

20. In the instant case, the statement of eye­witness Sunil

Kumar Goyal(PW­13), the injury attributed to the accused

appellant, recovery of weapon and the  motor cycle and the

statement of         Dr. Bhupesh Dayal(PW­6) and Dr. Ramesh

Chandra Khatik(PW­7) that the injury on the head attributed to

the appellant could have been sufficient to cause death, clearly

corroborates the  prosecution  case  which leaves  no  manner  of

doubt that the appellant was actively involved in the commission

of crime and once that fact is predicated beyond reasonable

doubt, the partial statement which has been doubted could not

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be used by the appellant as a defence to shake the prosecution

case which has been discussed by us in detail, deserves rejection.

21. In our considered view, the appeal is devoid of merit and is

dismissed.   The appellant is on bail.   His bail bonds are

cancelled.   He is directed to surrender forthwith and serve the

remaining part of sentence.  

…………………………J. (A.M. KHANWILKAR)

…………………..…….J. (AJAY RASTOGI)

NEW DELHI February 15, 2019

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