Judgment Case ID: 6510

Judgment:
Criminal Appeal No. 328 of 1979. From the Judgment and Order dated 2.1.1979 of the Alla habad High Court in Government Appeal No. 663 of 1973. Pramod Swarup for the Appellant. Manoj Swarup	 Prashant Choudhary and Dalveer Bhandari for the Respondent. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by FATHIMA BEEVI	 J. Khanjan Pal	 the appellant	 was con victed by the High Court for the offence punishable under Section 302	 I.P.C. and sentenced to undergo imprisonment for life	 in reversal of the order of acquittal passed by the Sessions Judge	 Agra. The brief facts of the case are as under: The appellant	 Khanjan Pal	 and the deceased	 Deep Singh	 were working in the bangles welding factory of Data Ram in Mohalla Rajputana	 Thana Firozabad. The prosecution case was that while working in the factory at about 2.30 P.M. on 8.4.1972	 the appellant 608 said to the deceased that he had illicit relationship with one Tara. Deep Singh said that he considered Tara to be his sister. The altercation ensued between the appellant and the deceased and in the course of the altercation	 the appellant stabbed the deceased with a knife and this incident was witnessed by P.W. 2	 Ram Pratap Singh	 and P.W. 4	 Maharaj Singh besides Umrao Singh	 P.W. 1. The injury sustained by the deceased was a punctured wound penetrating into chest cavity. The occurrence was reported at the police station by Umrao Singh	 father of the deceased at 3.00 P.M. the same day. In the course of the investigation	 blood stained shirt was seized from the appellant and sent for chemical examina tion. The certificate was to the effect that it was stained with human blood. The trial court acquitted the appellant discarding the testimony of the eye witnesses mainly for the reasons that the occurrence could not have happened at the alleged time and place as the place of occurrence was not mentioned in the first information report	 the postmortem report referred to the presence of undigested food in the abdomen of the deceased	 the presence of Umrao Singh (P.W. 1)	 Ram Pratap Singh (P.W. 2)	 and Maharaj Singh (P.W. 4) was doubtful in the light of the conduct of P.W. 3	 Data Ram and that since the attendance register was not produced	 it was doubtful whether the factory was opened on that day or not. The appellant was therefore given the benefit of doubt by the trial court. The High Court on a careful analysis of the entire evidence dislodged the finding of the trial court	 accepted the testimony of P.W. 2 and P.W. 4 and concluded that the prosecution had established the charge against the appel lant. We have been taken through the judgments ' and the relevant records of the case. We are satisfied that the High Court had interfered with the order of acquittal for cogent reasons and that the conclusion of the High Court that the appellant has caused the death of the deceased	 Deep Singh	 by stabbing with a knife in the manner alleged by the prose cution is unassailable. The approach by the trial court was clearly wrong and the finding is perverse. The testimony of the two independent eye witnesses had not been properly appreciated. Their presence at the scene could not at all be doubted in the light of what P.W. 3 has deposed. They are probable witnesses and there had not been any infirmity in their evidence as rightly pointed out by the High Court. The evidence of P.W. 1	 rejected by the trial court was also not accepted by the High Court. The reasoning adopted by the trial court	 in our opinion	 was so perverse that the High Court was justified in upsetting the finding and 609 arriving at an independent conclusion which is fully sup ported by the evidence on record. We do not	 therefore	 see any merit in the contention advanced on behalf of the appel lant that the conviction is wrong. however	 agree with the learned counsel for the appellant that on the basis of the facts proved	 the offence is not murder punishable under Section 302	 I.P.C.	 and that the act of the appellant as proved would fail only under Section 304 Part II	 I.P.C. The appellant had in statement under Section 3 13	 Cr.P.C.	 admitted that there had been an altercation between the two and the deceased received the injury in the course of a scuffle. The evidence clearly established that the whole incident was a sudden development and that the appellant had acted at the spur of the moment and without any pre meditation. There had been no ill will or enmity between the two. A casual remark made by the appellant provoked the deceased and the altercation ensued which culminated in the stabbing with knife. The appellant used the knife only once and did not act in any cruel man ner. It was in the sudden quarrel in heat of passion that the appellant inflicted the injury on the deceased without any intention to cause death but having knowledge that such act was likely to cause the death of the deceased. In such circumstances. the act of the appellant falls under Excep tion 4 to Section 300	 I.P.C.	 and the appellant is liable to be convicted only under Section 304	 Part II	 I.P.C. We accordingly alter the conviction to one under Section 304	 Part II	 I.P.C. We are told that the appellant had already undergone imprisonment for over one year. He had been released on bail by order of this Court dated 16.7. The appellant	 a young man who had been at large for over nearly 12 years	 in our opinion	 cannot be committed to prison for any further period at this stage. To meet the ends of justice	 we direct the appellant to pay a fine of Rs.50	000 in addition to the term of imprisonment he has already suffered. We	 thus modify the sentence awarded by the High Court. We also direct that the fine	 if realised	 shall be paid to P.W. 1	 Umrao Singh	 the father of the deceased and other legal heirs of Deep Singh. In case of default in payment of fine	 the appellant shall undergo further imprisonment for one year. The appeal is partly allowed. G.N. Appeal partly allowed.

Summary:
The appellant was charged with the murder of a co worker at the factory in which they were working. The Trial Court discarded the testimony of eye witnesses and other circum stances and acquitted the appellant	 by giving him the benefit of doubt. On appeal	 the High Court accepted the testimony of the eyewitnesses and convicted the appellant under Section 302 IPC and sentenced him to undergo life imprisonment. This appeal is against the High Court 's judgment. Allowing the appeal in part	 HELD: 1. The High Court had interfered with the order of acquittal for cogent reasons and that the conclusion of the High Court that the appellant has caused the death of the deceased	 by stabbing with a knife in the manner alleged by the prosecution is unassailable. The approach by the trial court was clearly wrong and the finding is perverse. The testimony of the two independent eye witnesses had not been properly appreciated. Their presence at the scene could not at all be doubted in the light of what P.W. 3 has deposed. They are probable witnesses and there had not been any infirmity in their evidence. [608F G] 2. However	 the offence is not murder punishable under Section 302 IPC	 and that the act of the appellant as proved would fail only under Section 304 Part II	 IPC. The appel lant had admitted that there had been an altercation between the two and the deceased received the injury in the course of a scuffle. The evidence clearly established that the whole incident was a sudden development and that the appel lant had acted at the spur of the moment and without any pre meditation. 607 There had been no ill will or enmity between the two. A casual remark made by the appellant provoked the deceased and the altercation ensued which culminated in the stabbing with knife. The appellant used the knife only once and did not act in any cruel manner. It was in the sudden quarrel in heat of passion that the appellant inflicted the injury on the deceased without any intention to cause death but having knowledge that such act was likely to cause the death of the deceased. [609B D] 3. The conviction is altered to one under Section 304	 Part II	 IPC. Appellant had already undergone imprisonment for over one year. He had been released on bail by order of this Court. The appellant	 a young man who had been at large for over nearly 12 years	 cannot be committed to prison for any further period at this stage. [609E] 4. To meet the ends of justice	 it is directed that the appellant should pay a fine of Rs.50	000 in addition to the term of imprisonment he has already suffered. This amount would be paid to the father of the deceased and other legal heirs. In case of default in payment of fine	 the appellant should undergo further imprisonment for six months. [609F G]