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State Of U.P v. Hakim Singh And Others

Supreme Court Of India
Oct 12, 1979
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Factual and Procedural Background

The case arises out of a double-murder that occurred around midnight inside the victims’ house. The trial court (Sessions Judge) convicted the respondents—Hawaldar, Ziledar, Ram Singh and Hakim Singh—imposing, inter alia, the death penalty. On 10 October 1973, a Division Bench of the Allahabad High Court set aside those convictions and acquitted the respondents. The State appealed to the Supreme Court by special leave. The present judgment decides that appeal.

Legal Issues Presented

  1. Whether the Allahabad High Court erred in discarding the testimony of prosecution eyewitnesses (PWs 1 and 5) and in acquitting the respondents.
  2. If the acquittal was unsustainable, what sentence ought to be imposed upon the respondents.

Arguments of the Parties

Appellant (State) Arguments

  • The High Court’s approach to the evidence of PWs 1 and 5 was perverse; their testimony is natural, straightforward and corroborated by PW 2.
  • A burning lantern provided adequate lighting, enabling proper identification of the assailants.
  • Non-examination of the injured witness Mt. Sudama does not weaken the prosecution case once the key eyewitnesses are believed.

Respondents’ Arguments

  • Counsel Mr. A. N. Mulla candidly conceded that, on the existing record, the High Court’s judgment could not be supported.
  • The defence confined itself to urging mitigation of sentence rather than contesting guilt.

Table of Precedents Cited

Precedent Rule or Principle Cited For Application by the Court
Mst Dalbir Kaur v. State of Punjab (1976) 4 SCC 158 Relatives who witness a crime committed in their own house are “natural witnesses,” not “interested” or partisan by that fact alone. Used to reject the High Court’s view that PWs 1 and 5, being related to the deceased and living in the same house, were partisan; the Supreme Court treated them as credible natural witnesses.

Court's Reasoning and Analysis

Justice S. Murtaza Fazal Ali, speaking for the Supreme Court, found the High Court judgment “bordering on perversity” for several reasons:

  • The High Court had not examined the intrinsic merits of the eyewitness testimony but dismissed it on speculative improbabilities.
  • After detailed examination, the Court held their evidence “credit-worthy, natural and straightforward,” noting that PW 1 withstood extensive cross-examination.
  • PW 2, a next-door neighbour, corroborated material aspects of their account.
  • A burning lantern hung a few yards from the courtyard, providing sufficient illumination for identification; no evidence showed guards blocking the witnesses’ view.
  • Reliance on two reliable eyewitnesses was adequate; multiplying witnesses is unnecessary when testimony is already trustworthy.
  • Defence counsel’s inability to support the acquittal further confirmed the prosecution case, shifting argument solely to sentencing.

On the sentencing question, the Court accepted that the respondents had been under an acquittal order since 1973. In those circumstances, imposition of the death penalty was deemed neither proper nor expedient.

Holding and Implications

HELD: The appeal is allowed. The Allahabad High Court’s acquittal is set aside. Convictions entered by the Sessions Judge are restored, but the death sentences are commuted to imprisonment for life. Specifically:

  • Respondents Hawaldar, Ziledar and Ram Singh are convicted under Sections 302/34 IPC for the murders of Amrit Sri and Lajja Ram.
  • Respondent Hakim Singh is convicted for the murder of Tale Singh.
  • Each respondent is sentenced to life imprisonment; all other convictions and sentences imposed by the trial court are affirmed.

Implications: The decision reinstates the trial court’s factual findings, emphasises the appellate duty to scrutinise eyewitness testimony fairly, and clarifies that related eyewitnesses can be considered natural and reliable. No new legal precedent is set on sentencing, but the case underscores judicial reluctance to impose the death penalty when long periods have elapsed under an acquittal.

Show all summary ...

S. Murtaza Fazal Ali, J.— This appeal by special leave is directed against a Division Bench judgment of the Allahabad High Court dated October 10, 1973 setting aside the conviction and sentence imposed by the trial court on the respondents and acquitting them of the charges framed against them. The leading judgment was delivered by D.S Mathur J., with whom Mohd. Hamid Hussain J., concurred. The details of the prosecution cage are to be found in the judgment of the High Court and that of the trial court and it is not necessary to repeat the same all over again. We have heard Counsel for the parties and have also perused the judgment and have been taken through the entire evidence. A perusal of the judgment clearly shows that the High Court has not dealt with the intrinsic merits of the evidence of the eye witnesses, particularly of PWs 1 and 5, at all but has brushed aside their evidence on surmises and conjectures and preponderance of improbabilities which, in fact, did not exist. With very great respect to the Hon'ble judges we are constrained to observe that the judgment of the High Court, particularly that of D.S Mathur, J., who spoke for the court, is not only in accordance not with law but it borders on perversity. It seems that the learned Judges never made any real effort to appreciate or marshal the evidence in order to reach the conclusion regarding the credibility of the eyewitnesses, who had been examined, to prove the truth of the prosecution case. We have gone through the evidence of PWs 1 and 5 particularly in great detail and we find that their evidence is not only credit worthy but is natural and very staightforward and contains a ring of truth. One of the general grounds on which evidence of these two witnesses was rejected by the High Court was that these witnesses were partisan or interested witnesses. Being near relations and living practically in the same house, these witnesses cannot be said to be interested witnesses, but are very natural witnesses as held by this Court in the case of Mst Dalbir Kaur v. State of Punjab (1976) 4 SCC 158. Moreover, as the murder took place near about midnight inside the house we could not have expected witnesses from outside to see the occurrence. On a perusal of evidence of PWs 1 and 5, we are fully satisfied that these witnesses are stating the truth and have not concealed anything. We might also mention that although PW 1 was subjected to a gruelling end searching cross-examination yet nothing of importance was elicited from his evidence in order to shake his testimony. Furthermore, the evidence of PW 2 who was next door neighbour of PWs 1 and 5 corroborates their evidence and we see no reason to distrust his testimony.

2. Realising this situation, Mr A.N Mulla, learned Counsel for the respondents, very fairly conceded that it was impossible for him in the state of the evidence to support the judgment of the High Court acquitting the accused. The High Court merely based its decisions or the facts that PWs 1 and 5 could not have identified the respondents. The evidence of PWs 1 and 5 clearly shows that a burning lantern was hanging on the thatch of the house only a few yards from the courtyard where the accused had entered and thus there was sufficient light to enable PWs 1 and 5 to identify the assailant of the two deceased who were shot dead. PWs 1 and 5 were in the Barotha which was guarded by three unknown persons armed with guns and lathis but there is no evidence to show that the accused guarding the entrance were standing in a straight line so as to block the view of PWs 1 and 5. Furthermore, much has been made by the High Court of the fact that Mt. Sudama who was also injured was not examined as a witness. If the evidence of PWs 1 and 5 is believed it is not necessary to multiply witnesses to prove the case and thus non-examination of Mt. Sudama does not, in our opinion, cast any doubt on the prosecution case. In view, however, of the candid concession made by Mr Mulla, we do not consider it necessary to go into further details. Mr Mulla, however, confined his arguments to the question of sentence at the end. After a careful consideration of the entire evidence and the circumstances proved in this case, we are clearly of the opinion that the prosecution case against the appellants as found by the learned Sessions Judge, has been fully established beyond reasonable doubt. We are also of the opinion that no other reasonable view on the evidence could be possible than the one which was taken by the Sessions Court. We think that so far as arguments on the question of sentence are concerned, there is great substance in the same. Although this was a case of double murder, the appellants had be a acquitted on October 10, 1973 and it will not be proper or expedient to impose the extreme penalty of death on the respondents, as was done by the trial court. We, therefore, allow the appeal and set aside the judgment of the High Court and restore that of the Sessions Judge, with the modification that the respondents Hawaldar, Ziledar and Ram Singh are convicted under Sections 302/34 IPC for the murder of Amrit Sri and Lajja Ram and Hakim Singh for the murder of Tale Singh and each of them are sentenced to imprisonment for life. The other conviction and sentences imposed by the trial court on these appellants are restored and maintained and the order of the High Court is set aside. The Respondents 2 to 4 who are on bail will now surrender and serve out the remaining portion of the sentence.