RAMESH DASU CHAUHAN Vs THE STATE OF MAHARASHTRA
Bench: HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE ROHINTON FALI NARIMAN, HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE SURYA KANT
Judgment by: HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE SURYA KANT
Case number: Crl.A. No.-001682-001682 / 2012
Diary number: 12524 / 2012
Advocates: AJAY KUMAR TALESARA Vs
NON-REPORTABLE
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CRIMINAL APPEAL NO. 1682 OF 2012
Ramesh Dasu Chauhan and Another ..... APPELLANT(S) VERSUS
The State of Maharashtra .....RESPONDENT(S)
JUDGMENT
SURYA KANT, J.
The Sessions Judge, Nagpur vide judgment and order dated 26 th
February, 2003 convicted the appellants under Section 302 read with
Section 34 of the Indian Penal Code (for brevity, “the I.P.C.”) and
sentenced to undergo life imprisonment besides a fine of Rs.1,500/-
each and in default thereof they were directed to undergo Rigorous
Imprisonment for six months. They were further convicted under
Section 392 read with Section 34, I.P.C. and sentenced to undergo
Rigorous Imprisonment for three years and to pay a fine of Rs.1,000/-
each and in default thereof they were directed to undergo Rigorous
Imprisonment for three months.
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2. The appellants’ conviction and sentence was upheld by a Division
Bench of the High Court of Judicature at Bombay, Nagpur Bench in
Criminal Appeal No. 272/2003, decided on 11.04.2008. Both these
judgments are under challenge in this 2nd Appeal.
BRIEF FACTS:
3. Deceased Kamlesh Kumari Trivedi, aged about 79 years used to
reside along with her daughter Rani Trivedi and grand daughter
Purnima Trivedi in Rajnigandha Apartments, Ambazari, Nagpur. Rani
Trivedi was a school teacher and used to leave home for her work
around 7.20 a.m. and return back in the evening. Purnima Trivedi was
studying in M.A. in a college and she too used to leave for her classes
at about 10.00 a.m. and return by afternoon. Deceased Kamlesh
Kumari Trivedi, thus, would remain alone in the house during the afore
stated period.
4. On the fateful day, i.e., 28th August, 2001, both Rani Trivedi and
Purnima Trivedi left for their respective destinations while Kamlesh
Kumari Trivedi was all by herself in the house. When Purnima Trivedi
returned from College around 1.30 p.m., she found her grandmother
(Kamlesh Kumari Trivedi) lying dead in the drawing room with visible
signs of strangulation. The Onida T.V. set kept in the drawing room
was found missing. Purnima Trivedi immediately rushed to her
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neighbours Raisaheb Chourasiya and Baliram Fulari and informed
them about the incident. Both of them accompanied Purnima to the
apartment. Baliram Fulari, on the request of Chourasiya, informed the
police control room about the incident.
5. Raisaheb Chourasiya, noticed on the date of occurrence that two
young boys had come on a red coloured motorcycle; stopped it in front
of Rajnigandha Apartments; entered the apartment building and after
some time vanished from the spot. Mr. Sevakram Thaokar, Inspector of
Crime Branch, Nagpur rushed to the spot and on the basis of the
information divulged by the neighbours, he carried out search
operations and apprehended the appellants from near the Gupta Hotel
in village Hingna. On personal search of one of the suspect, some
cash amount and a silver coin was recovered; their motor cycle was
seized and Onida T.V. was also then got recovered at the instance of
first appellant (Ramesh). Crime No. 246/2001 under Section 302,
392/34 was registered. On consideration of the chargesheet, charges
under Sections 302, 392/34, I.P.C. were framed to which the appellants
pleaded not guilty and claimed trial.
6. The prosecution, in all, examined eleven witnesses to establish
the charge, but none by the defence. The appellants in their statement
under Section 313, Cr.PC, as well as in the cross-examination of
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prosecution witnesses, pleaded absolute denial and claimed to have
been made a scapegoat by the police in order to cool the public rage
down against the heinous crime.
7. Three points fell for consideration of the Learned Sessions Judge,
namely,
(i) Whether deceased Kamlesh Kumari Trivedi died homicidal
death?
(ii) Whether the prosecution was able to prove that accused Nos. 1
and 2 in furtherance of their common intention committed murder
of Kamlesh Kumari Trivedi?
(iii) Whether the prosecution had further succeeded in proving that
accused Nos. 1 and 2, in furtherance of their common intention,
committed robbery of taking away Onida T.V., silver coin and
cash amount of Rs.200/- from the custody of deceased Kamlesh
Kumari Trivedi?
8. The Trial Court was alive to the situation that in order to prove a
criminal charge by means of circumstantial evidence, it was imperative
on the prosecution to establish beyond any doubt that – (i) the
circumstances from which the conclusion of guilt is to be drawn must
be fully established; (ii) the facts so established should be consistent
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only with the hypothesis of the guilt of the accused; (iii) the
circumstances should be of conclusive nature and they should exclude
any possible hypothesis except the one to be proved; and (iv) the chain
of evidence should be complete leaving no reasonable ground for the
conclusion consistent with the innocence of the accused.
9. The Trial Court thereafter scrutinised the entire evidence within
the framework of cited parameters and after an elaborate
confabulation, it came to the conclusion that Kamlesh Kumari Trivedi
died a homicidal death; the appellants were duly seen entering
Rajnigandha Apartments at the most relevant time by Raisaheb
Chourasiya (P.W.9), the recovery of Onida T.V., silver coin and a part of
currency from the appellants was also a strong circumstance to nail
them, who were consequently held guilty of the offence(s) under
Sections 302 and 392 read with Section 34 of the I.P.C. and sentenced
accordingly.
10. The High Court re-evaluated the prosecution evidence in its entirety
and banking upon the statement of the star witness, Raisaheb
Chourasiya (P.W.9) coupled with the deposition made by Sevakram
Thaokar, Police Inspector, Crime Branch (P.W.11), it concurred with the
Trial Court and dimissed the appeal.
11. We have heard Mr. Ekansh Bansal, Learned Counsel for the
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appellants and Mr. Nishant R. Katneshwarkar, Learned Counsel on
behalf of the State and gone through the record with their assistance.
12. It was vehemently urged on behalf of the appellants that no
Identification Test Parade was conducted before the Court to establish
the presence of appellants at the place of crime, even though the star
prosecution witness, Raisaheb Chourasiya (P.W.9) has acknowleged
that the two young persons who came on the red coloured motorcycle
had covered their faces with mufflers. The version of Raisaheb
Chourasiya (P.W.9) was sought to be discredited on the plea that the
appellants being in the age group of 30s, could not be roped in as
young boys of 20-25 who were allegedly noticed entering Rajnigandha
Apartments around the time when the occurrence took place. Learned
Counsel further argued that the appellants were never confronted with
the alleged stolen items for identification, more so when the panch
witnesses of alleged recovery have resiled and declared hostile. He
thus, urged that crucial links in the formation of chain of circumstantial
evidence are conspicuously missing so as to link the appellants with
the offence. The prosecution has, therefore, failed to establish its case
beyond reasonable doubt. Counsel for the State contrarily, maintained
that its a proven case against the appellants and this Court need not re-
appraise the concurrent findings returned by the two Courts.
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13. We find that the question which falls for consideration of this
Court is whether the circumstantial evidence led in the instant case is
so unimpeachable that it establishes the guilt of the appellants beyond
the shadow of doubt.
14. The expression `circumstantial evidence’ has been the subject
matter of consideration in a catena of decisions wherein it has been
precisely defined as a combination of such facts that there is no escape
for the accused because the facts taken as a whole do not admit to any
inference but of his guilt. It has also been coined as a Complete Chain
Link Theory, putting onus on the prosecution to prove beyond
reasonable doubt, the chain of events which lead to only one
conclusion, namely, the culpability of the accused.
15. This Court in Sharad Birdhi Chand Sharda v. The State of
Maharashtra1 elaborately considered the standard of proof
necessitated for recording a conviction on the basis of circumstantial
evidence and laid down the five golden principles of standard of proof
required to be established in such a case, which are paraphrased as
follows:-
i) The circumstances from which the conclusion of guilt is to be
drawn should be fully established;
1(1984) 4 SCC 116
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ii) The facts so established should be consistent only with the
hypothesis of the guilt of the accused, that is to say, these should
not be explainable on any other hypothesis except that the
accused is guilty;
iii) The circumstances should be conclusive in nature and tendency;
iv) They should exclude every possible hypothesis except the one to
be proved; and
v) There must be a chain of evidence so complete as not to leave
any reasonable ground for the conclusion consistent with the
innocence of the accused and must show that in all human
probability the acts must have been committed by the accused.
16. These precepts have been unvaryingly reiterated by this Court
from time to time including recently in Manoj Kumar v. State of
Uttarakhand2.
17. Let us now examine whether the prosecution has successfully
established these well-known parameters in the case in hand?
18. The prosecution case foremostly hinges upon the version of
Raisaheb Chourasiya (P.W.9). He earlier made a statement under
Section 164, Cr.PC on 16.10.2001 and consistent with thereto he has
2(2019) 5 SCC 663
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unequivocally deposed that on 28.08.2001 at around 11.45 a.m., he
was drying his hair in his apartment when two boys came on a red
coloured motorcycle of Hero Honda make, which they parked in front of
his neighbour Nag Devi’s apartment. The two boys went in the
direction of Plot No. 94-95 and he thought that they might have come to
see the house which was under construction. He, however, noticed
that the two boys opened the front gate of Rajnigandha Apartments and
went inside. Meanwhile, Raisaheb Chourasiya got a call on phone and
after attending to it for about 20 minutes, when he again looked for the
Hero Honda Motorcycle, it was not there. Both the boys were in plain
apparels and had put mufflers on their faces. He thereafter went to see
one of the neighbours and sat in the verandah of the later’s house.
After some time, Purnima Trivedi came crying and informed that her
grandmother was not speaking and she was lying in a pool of blood.
She also informed that someone had stolen their T.V. set. P.W.9 along
with Purnima and one Baliram Fulari went inside the apartment and
found that the grandmother of Purnima was lying dead and blood was
oozing out of her nose. He asked Purnima not to touch anything and
let the police come and make the enquiry. He then asked his
neighbour, Baliram Fulari to inform the police about the incident. On the
same day at about 5.30 p.m., the police brought the two boys with the
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motorcycle to his house and he identified them as well as the
motorcycle, for there were five stickers of `sindoor’ on the mudguard of
the motorcycle and he also remembered its Registration Number.
Raisaheb Chourasiya (P.W.9) identified both the boys in Court-room
also, namely, the appellants. Pertinently, there is not even a suggestion
to the witness in his cross-examination that he was not present in his
apartment or that he did not see the appellants entering the
Rajnigandha Apartments. The only question put to the witness was
apparently to remind him that he could not recognize the boys as they
had covered their faces with mufflers, which he has categorically
denied. The witness very emphatically says in his cross-examination
that, “Incorrect to state that I have idedntified the accused except they
are before the Court”. The defence has indeed miserably failed to
cause any dent in the veracity or the capability of the witness to identify
the two boys who came on the motorcycle and entered the front gate of
Rajnigandha Apartments or his assertion that those two boys were
none else than the appellants.
19. Baliram Fulari (P.W.3) has testified that on 28 th August, 2001
around 1.30 p.m. one of his neighbours Raisaheb Chourasiya (P.W.9)
came to his house and informed about the murder of the mother of
Rani Trivedi (P.W.1) and the theft of some articles. Purnima Trivedi
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(P.W.4) was also accompanying Raisaheb Chourasiya. He informed
the police about the incident on the request made by Raisaheb
Chourasiya and also gave registered number of the red coloured
motorcycle to the police. Baliram Fulari (P.W.3) has specifically
deposed that he informed Shri Kangle, D.C.P. of Crime Branch about
the incident. The only suggestion given in the cross-examination to
Baliram Fulari, (P.W.3) is that no information was passed on to him
either by Raisaheb Chourasiya or Purnima Trivedi. As against it, the
witness has further clarified in his cross-examination that on the same
day at about 5.30 p.m., the police brought the suspects to the place of
incident. He thus fully corroborates the testimony of Raisaheb
Chourasiya (P.W.9) and Purnima Trivedi (P.W.4) to the extent that the
police brought two boys at the place of occurrence and both of them
were seen by P.W.1, P.W.3, P.W.4 and P.W.9.
20. According to Rani Trivedi (P.W.1), she got an emergency phone
call from her daughter around 2.30 p.m. about her mother having been
assaulted and the incident of theft in their house. She immediately left
for home and saw the bloodstains on the floor; that her mother was
throttled and strangulated with her own sari and the police was present
on the scene. She found that the cupboards in the room of their
apartment were broken and the items were scattered. A silver coin of
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`Goddess Lakshmi’ along with cash amount of Rs.200/- besides Onida
T.V. were missing. The thieves, however, could not break open the
Godrej almirah in which valuables were kept. She has indubitably
deposed that the police brought two persons in the evening to their flat
and she identified them who were present in Court as accused Nos. 1
and 2. Her statement too is totally unruffled in the cross-examination.
Rather, she has well-explained that Raisaheb Chourasiya (P.W.9) lives
in the third house in row from her house.
21. Purnima Trivedi (P.W.4), grand daughter of the deceased
chronically narrated the events which she saw after returning from
college at about 1.15 p.m. She has deposed that on reaching the flat,
she kept ringing the bell but got no response, therefore, she tried to
open the main door and pushed it due to which the pelmet fell down.
She found on entering the flat that her grandmother was lying in a pool
of blood in the drawing room. She sprinkled water on her face thinking
she might be alive. While she was looking around she found that
Onida T.V. was missing. She found that cash amount of Rs.200/- and a
silver coin were also missing from the cubboard. She immediately ran
to inform her neighbours and rushed to the house of Raisaheb
Chourasiya (P.W.9), who stayed two houses away from their apartment.
She told him about the incident. No meaningful question was asked to
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her in the cross-examination to indicate any overcolouring in her
version.
22. We may now turn to the statement of Sevakram Thaokar
(P.W.11), the Investigating Officer-cum-Inspector of Crime Branch. He
along with the staff immediately reached at the spot i.e. Rajnigandha
Apartments on receipt of the wireless message and learnt through
Raisaheb Chourasiya (P.W.9) about two persons coming on a red
coloured motorcycle. He started searching for the suspects without any
loss of time and reached upto village Hingna where he found a red
coloured motorcycle in front of Gupta Hotel. There were two persons
with the motorcycle, who were brought to Gupta Hotel and he called
two Panchas so as to interrogate the suspects in their presence. The
two suspects, namely, the appellants were eventually arrested and a
sum of Rs.231/- and one HMT wrist watch was seized from appellant
No. 1 (Ramesh). Another sum of Rs. 142/- with silver coin and one
goggle was recovered from appellant No. 2 (Kamlesh). Their Hero
Honda Motorcycle was seized vide Ext. P-27. Appellant No. 1 also got
recovered Onida T.V. from his residence at Wana Dongri vide recovery
Ext. P-25.
23. As per the post mortem report of Kamlesh Kumari Trivedi, the
medical officer found following four ante-mortem wounds given in
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Column 17 of the medical legal report Ext. P-17:-
“1. Ligature mark present over front of neck, below thyroid cartilage, transversely placed. Completely encircling the neck except over nape of neck at the site of plait, on both side of neck ligature marked 6 cms below tip of both mastoid processes, length of ligature mark 30 Cms, breadth, 2.5 cm. slightly grooved, dry hard.
2. Contused abrasion present over posterior aspect of right forearms 2 cm x 2 cm. reddish brown,
3. Contused abrasion present over left side of neck, 2 cm below left angle of mandible 4 cm away from middle, obliquely placed 2 cm. x 1 cm. Reddish Brown.
4. Contused abrasion present over left side of neck, 2 cm. Lateral to injury No. 3 size 1 cm x 1 cm reddish brown.”
24. The medical officer unambiguously opined that injury No. 1 of
Column 17 along with internal damage was sufficient to cause death of
the victim in the ordinary course of nature. The cause of death was
`Asphyxia’ i.e. due to ligature strangulation.
25. From the nature of ante-mortem injuries suffered by the deceased
as described in the inquest panchnama Ext. P-12 read with the post
mortem report, it can be safely believed that the death was `homicidal’
within the meaning of Section 299 I.P.C. The medical evidence in this
regard is fully corroborated by the statement of Rani Trivedi (P.W.1),
Baliram Fulari (P.W.3), Purnima Trivedi (P.W.4) and Raisaheb
Chourasiya (P.W.9) and thus there is no room for doubt that the
deceased Kamlesh Kumari Trivedi died a homicidal death.
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26. There is clinching evidence on record to establish that the
appellants were seen around 11.45 a.m. entering the front gate of
Rajnigandha Apartments where the deceased was residing. They left
the place after 20 minutes or so. As per the eye-witness’s account the
appellants were lastly seen nearest to the place of occurrence before
they disappeared.
27. There is no gainsaying that confession made to a police officer
cannot be proved as against a person accused of any offence and no
confession made by a person while in police custody except made in
the immediate presence of a Magistrate, can be proved against him in
view of embargo created by Sections 25 and 26 of the Evidence Act.
Section 27 of the Act nevertheless carves out an exception as it
provides that when any fact is deposed to as discovered in
consequence of information received from a person accused of any
offence while he is in police custody, “so much of such information”,
regardless of it being a confession or not, may be proved, if it relates
distinctly to the fact thereby discovered. Section 27 of the Evidence Act
thus enables the cliched use of a custodian statement made in the
ordinary course of events. The statement made by an accused while in
police custody can be split in two parts and to the extent of it being a
disclosure statement which is the immediate cause of discovering new
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facts, would be legally admissible in evidence though the remainder of
such statement may be liable to be discarded. The Investigating
Officer, Sevakram Thaokar (P.W.11) has very emphatically deposed
that out of the stolen items, Onida T.V. set was got recovered at the
instance of the first appellant from his house. Similarly, the silver coin
and a part of the stolen currency was recovered from the second
appellant. This is not the appellants’ case that they were forced to make
the incriminating statements under any threat. They have chosen to
defend themselves only on the basis of denial. The revelation made by
the Investigating Officer to the limited extent of recovery of the stolen
items pursuant to the disclosure statements made by the appellants,
therefore, falls within the four-corners of Section 27 of the Evidence Act
and has been rightly relied upon by the Courts below.
28. True it is that the statement of a police officer has to be
scrupulously scrutinised and the Court would cautiously and
suspiciously read the same for evaluating the cumulative effect of the
entire evidence on record. If the statement of PW-11 is scanned in its
entirety, it stands out that no sooner Raisaheb Chourasiya (P.W.9) gave
the description of two young persons who came on a red coloured
motorcycle or their entry into Rajnigandha Apartments, the police
inspector swung into action and apprehended them within no loss of
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time. The two persons, namely, the appellants were brought back to
Rajnigandha Apartments and they were duly identified by Raisaheb
Chourasiya (P.W.9). Baliram Fulari (P.W.3) and Rani Trivedi (P.W.1)
also saw and later on identified them in their depositions. Since the
appellants have not disputed their identity in the cross-examination of
Raisaheb Chourasiya (P.W.9) or of Rani Trivedi (P.W.1), it is too late for
them to allege that no Test Identification Parade was conducted.
29. It is no longer debatable that the Identification Parade of the
accused before the Court is not the main substantive piece of evidence,
rather it is corroborative in nature. [Please see: (i) Rafikul Alam v.
State of West Bengal (2007) SCC Online Cal. 728 or (2008) 1 CHN
685; (ii) Navaneethakrishnan v. State by Inspector of Police (2018)
16 SCC 161].
30. There are more than one reasons to trust P.W.9 (Raisaheb
Chourasyia). Firstly, there is no suggestion or even a whisper of any
animosity between Raisaheb Chourasyia and the appellants. He had
no motive to falsely implicate the appellants. Secondly, the presence of
the appellants coming on red coloured motorcycle and their entry to
Rajnigandha Apartments, as seen by the witness, has not been
expressly denied in his cross-examination. Thirdly, P.W.9 being
resident of the same Complex, is a natural and not a `chance’ witness.
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Fourthly, Raisaheb Chourasiya’s version has been fully corroborated by
the other prosecution witnesses like Rani Trivedi (P.W.1), Baliram Fulari
(P.W.3) and Purnima Trivedi (P.W.4). Fifthly, he is consistent
throughout, be it may his statement under Section 164, Cr.PC and/or
deposition on oath. Sixthly, the attempt made on the character
assassination of the witness has miserably failed. We thus find no
ground to suspect P.W.9 for non-existent reasons.
31. The appellants, in all probabilities, were present in Rajnigandha
Apartments at the time of occurrence. They have failed to explain any
other reason of their presence. They have also not questioned their
identity by Raisaheb Chourasiya (P.W.9) and Rani Trivedi (P.W.1).
They have not doubted or condemned the police officer (P.W.11) of
falsely planting any recovery on them. Further, all the stolen items
recovered at the instance of the appellants have been duly identified by
Rani Trivedi (P.W.1) and Purnima Trivedi (P.W.4) as their belongings
and thus the link between the crime and the recovered items has been
conclusively established. The appellants having been lastly seen near
the scene of crime, their complete silence and/or evasive statement
under Section 313, Cr.PC, does not inspire confidence to discard the
prosecution case.
32. Both the Courts below have weighed the evidence to reach a
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definite conclusion that the appellants and the appellants alone entered
the apartment of Kamlesh Kumari Trivedi and committed her murder by
strangulation with a motive to commit robbery in the house. There is no
factual or legal infirmity in the findings returned by the Courts below,
which may call for any interference by this Court. The Appeal is
accordingly dismissed.
………………………………………….. J. (DEEPAK GUPTA)
…………………………… J. (SURYA KANT)
NEW DELHI
DATED : 04.07.2019
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