2025 INSC 173
SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
(HON’BLE J.B.
PARDIWALA, J. AND HON’BLE R. MAHADEVAN, JJ.)
LALITA
Petitioner
VERSUS
VISHWANATH & ORS.
Respondent
Criminal
Appeal No.1086 of 2017-Decided on 30-01-2025
Criminal, Abetment of suicide, Cruelty
(A) Penal
Code, 1860, Section 306, 498A read with Section 34 - Evidence Act,
1872, Section 113A – Abetment of suicide – Presumption – Held no cogent or
any reliable evidence on the basis of which it could be said that the accused
persons abated the commission of suicide - Mere harassment or cruelty is not
sufficient to infer abetment - There has to be some credible evidence that the
accused persons aided or instigated the deceased in some manner to take the
drastic step of putting an end to her life - Do not rule out the possibility of
the husband pressurizing the deceased to transfer the land once again on his
name - However, even such instances, by themselves, may not be sufficient to
come to the conclusion that the deceased was left with no alternative but to
commit suicide - Even with the aid of presumption under Section
113A of the Evidence Act, it is difficult to say that the accused persons
abetted the commission of suicide - It is possible that the deceased might have
felt bad because the first wife came back to the matrimonial home and being
hyper sensitive might have taken the extreme step to commit suicide - No case
is made out for interference – Appeal liable to be dismissed.
(Para 21 to 26, 39 and
40)
(B)
Criminal Procedure Code, 1973, Section 154 – First Information Report - F.I.Rs.
can be registered by a victim, a witness or some- one else with the knowledge
of the crime
- The police can record three different kinds of statements - The first kind of
statement is one which can be recorded as an F.I.R., the second kind of
statement is one which can be recorded by the police during the investigation,
and the third kind of statement is any kind of statement which would not fall
under any of the two categories mentioned above - Evidence is the matter of
testimony manifesting the fact on a particular precision or circumstances - The
First Information Report is not by itself a substantial piece of evidence and
the statement made therein cannot be considered as evidence unless it falls
within the purview of Section 32 of the Evidence Act - It is an
admitted fact that the original first informant did not die because of the
injuries caused by the applicants - The relative importance of a First
Information Report is far greater than any other statement recorded by the
police during the course of the investigation - It is the foremost information
the police gets about the commission of an offence and which can be used to
corroborate the story put-forward by the first informant under Section
157 of the Evidence Act or to contradict his version by facts
under Section 145 of the Evidence Act in case he is summoned as a
witness in the case by the Court - It may happen that the informant is the
accused himself - In such cases, the First Information Report lodged by him
cannot be used as an evidence against him because it is embodied in the basic
structure of our Constitution that a person cannot be compelled to be a witness
against himself - If the informant dies, the First Information Report can be,
unquestionably, used as a substantive evidence - A prerequisite condition must
be fulfilled before the F.I.R. is taken as a substantive piece of evidence i.e.
the death of the informant must have nexus with the F.I.R. filed or somehow
having some link with any evidence regarding the F.I.R
(Para 30 and 32)
(C) Criminal Procedure
Code, 1973, Section 154 – Evidence Act, Section 154(3) - First Information
Report – Death of first informant – Proof of contents of the FIR
through Investigating Officer – Admissibility in evidence - Held that for an
F.I.R. lodged by a deceased person to be treated as substantial, its contents
must be proved - It has to be corroborated and proved for there to be any value
of the same in the case - The F.I.R. can be used by the defence to impeach the
credit of the person who lodged the F.I.R. under Section 154(3) of
the Evidence Act - In case the death of the informant has no nexus with the
complaint lodged i.e. he died a natural death and did not succumb to the
injuries inflicted on him in relation to a matter, the contents of the F.I.R.
would not be admissible in evidence - In such circumstances, the contents
cannot be proved through the Investigating Officer - The Investigating Officer,
in the course of his deposition, should not be permitted to depose the
exact contents of the F.I.R. so as to make them admissible in evidence - All
that is permissible in law is that the Investigating Officer can, in his
deposition, identify the signature of the first informant and that of his own
on the First Information Report and he can depose about the factum of the
F.I.R. being registered by him on a particular date on a particular police
station - It is absolutely incorrect on the part of the Trial Court and the
High Court to say that in the absence of the first informant, the police
officer can prove the contents of the F.I.R. as per Section 67 of the
Evidence Act.
(Para
34 and 35)
ORDER
1.
This appeal is at the instance of the mother of the deceased (the de facto
complainant) seeking to assail the Judgment and order passed by the High Court
of Judicature at Bombay, Bench at Aurangabad in Criminal Appeal No.125/2013 by
which the High Court allowed the Criminal Appeal filed by the respondent -
herein (original accused persons) and thereby acquitting them of the offence
punishable under Sections 306, 498A read with Section 34 of the Indian
Penal Code (IPC).
2.
It is the case of the appellant that the deceased Dev Kanya was married to the
Respondent No.1 – herein namely Vishwanath past 1½ years before the date of
incident in question. It is her case that her daughter committed suicide
she was incessantly harassed by her husband, father-in-law, mother-in-law
and first wife of the husband.
3.
Upon First Information Report being registered by the father of the deceased,
the investigation started. The statements of various witnesses were recorded by
the police.
4.
The inquest panchnama of the dead body of the deceased was drawn in the
presence of panch witnesses. The dead body was sent for post-mortem. The
post-mortem report revealed that the cause of death was due to drowning. It is
the case of the appellant that her daughter committed suicide by jumping into a
well. The clothes and other articles were collected in the course of the
investigation and were sent to the Forensic Science Laboratory for chemical
analysis.
5.
Upon completion of the investigation, charge-sheet came to be filed against all
the four accused persons.
6.
The case came to be committed to the Court of Sessions under Section
209 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (Cr PC).
7.
Upon committal, the case crime to be registered as Sessions Case No.12/2012.
8.
The Trial Court framed charge vide Exhibit ‘11’ to which all the accused
persons pleaded not guilty and claimed to be tried.
9.
The prosecution examined the following witnesses in the course of the trial:-
1. Lalita Dadasaheb
Bolke (Exh.27)
2. Rambhau Dhondiram
Bolke (Exh.36),
3. Shivaji Bhaiamrao
Pawar (Exh.40),
4. Dnyandev Hariram
Patole (Exh.42),
5. Sonerao Kondiba
Bodkhe (Exh.44),
6. Baasaheb Maruti Patole (Exh.45),
7. Dhondiram Bhanudas
Bolke (Exh.46)
8. Dr. Blasahev
Bhimrao Sawant (Exh.51) &
9. Brijpalsing
Rajpalsing Thakur (Exh.54)
10.
The prosecution also led the following documentary evidence in support of its
case:-
1. Copy of sale deed
of S. no. 24/2 admeasuring 1 H.2 R. dated 21/11/2009 at Exh. 28.
2. Copy of sale deed
of S.o. 24/2 admeasuring 1 H. OR. Dated 21/11/2009 at Exh. 29.
3. Copy of mutation
entry of S. No. 24/2 admeasuring 1 h. 2 r. at Exh.30.
4. Copy of mutation
entry of S. No. 24/2 admeasuring 1 H. O. R. at Exh. 31.
5. Copy of mutation
entry dated 29/3/2011 at Exh. 32.
6. Copy of mutation
entry dated 30/4/2011 at Exh. 33.
8. Complaint dated
29/8/2011 at Exh. 35.
9. Spot Panchanam
Dated. 29/8/2011 at Exh. 41
10. Inquest Panchanama
dated 29/8/2011 at Exh. 43
11. Provisional cause
of death certificate at Exh. 52
13. Chemical
Analyzers' report at Exh. 33/1.
14. Copy of affidavit
of Devkanya w/o Vishwanath Borade at Article-'A'.
15. Copy of consent
deed at Article 'B'
11.
Upon closure of the recording of the oral evidence, the further statements of
all the accused persons were recorded by the Trial Court under Section
313 of the Code.
12.
Upon appreciation of the oral as well as documentary evidence on record, the
Trial Court held all the four accused persons guilty of the offence enumerated
above and sentenced them to undergo 10 years of rigorous imprisonment with fine
of Rs.1000/-.
13.
The accused persons, being dissatisfied with the Judgment and order of
conviction passed by the Trial Court, went in appeal before the High Court.
14.
The High Court upon re-appreciation and re-evaluation of the oral as well as
documentary evidence on record allowed the appeal and acquitted all the four
accused persons of the charges enumerated above.
15.
The State did not deem fit to challenge the Judgment and order of acquittal
passed by the High Court.
16.
The mother, i.e., the appellant herein is here before this Court with the
present appeal.
17.
At this stage, it is relevant to note that although the first information
report was lodged by father of the deceased yet before the trial commenced, he
passed away.
18.
In such circumstances, the mother though fit to come before this Court seeking
to challenge the impugned Judgment and Order of acquittal passed by the High
Court.
19.
We heard the learned counsel appearing for the appellant, the learned counsel
appearing for the respondent Nos.1 to 4 (original accused persons) and the
learned counsel appearing for the State of Maharashtra.
20.
We are of the view that no error not to speak of any error of law could be said
to have been committed by the High Court in acquitting all the four accused
persons.
21.
There is no cogent or any reliable evidence on the basis of which it could be
said that the accused persons abated the commission of suicide.
22.
Mere harassment or cruelty is not sufficient to infer abetement. There has to
be some credible evidence that the accused persons aided or instigated the
deceased in some manner to take the drastic step of putting an end to her life.
23.
We do not rule out the possibility of the husband pressurizing the deceased to
transfer the land once again on his name. However, even such instances, by
themselves, may not be sufficient to come to the conclusion that the deceased
was left with no alternative but to commit suicide.
24.
The learned counsel appearing for the appellant would rely upon Section
113A of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872 (for short ‘the Evidence Act’).
25.
In one of our recent pronouncements in the case of Ram Pyarey v. the State of
Uttar Pradesh, Criminal Appeal No. 1408 of 2015, decided on 09.01.2025, we have
explained the true purport of Section 113A of the Evidence Act, more
particularly in what manner it shall be applied. We quote the relevant observations:-
“It is relevant to note that under Section
113B, the Court shall presume dowry death unlike Section 113A where the
provision says that Court may presume abetment of suicide. This is the vital
difference between the two provisions which raises presumption as regards
abetment of suicide. When the Courts below want to apply Section
113A of the Evidence Act, the condition precedent is that there has to be
first some cogent evidence as regards cruelty & harassment. In the absence
of any cogent evidence as regards harassment or abetment in any form like
aiding or instigating, the court cannot straightway invoke Section 113A and
presume that the accused abetted the commission of suicide.”
26.
Even with the aid of presumption under Section 113A of the Evidence
Act, it is difficult to say that the accused persons abetted the commission of
suicide. It is possible that the deceased might have felt bad because the first
wife came back to the matrimonial home and being hyper sensitive might have
taken the extreme step to commit suicide.
27.
Before we close this matter, we deem it necessary to explain one very important
aspect of the procedural law so far as it relates to proving the contents of
the First Information Report through the Investigating Officer. In other words,
if the first informant has passed away before stepping into the witness box,
then whether the contents of such First Information Report can be proved
through the evidence of the Investigating Officer and read into the evidence.
28.
In the case on hand, as noted above, the First Information Report was lodged by
the father of the deceased. However, before the father could step into the
witness box, he passed away. In such circumstances, the Trial Court permitted
the Investigating Officer to prove the contents of the First
Information
Report Exhibit-35 and read into evidence as per Section 67 of the
Evidence Act.
29.
The basic purpose of filing a First Information Report is to set the criminal
law into motion. A First Information Report is the initial step in a criminal
case recorded by the police and contains the basic knowledge of the crime
committed, place of commission, time of commission, who was the victim, etc.
The term ‘First Information Report’ has been explained in the Code of
Criminal Procedure, 1973 by virtue of Section 154, which lays down that:
“Every information
relating to the commission of a cognizable offence, if given orally to an
officer in charge of a police station, shall be reduced to writing by him or
under his direction, and be read over to the informant and every such information,
whether given in writing or reduced to writing as aforesaid, shall be signed by
the person giving it, and the substance thereof shall be entered in a book to
be kept by such officer in such form as the State Government may prescribe in
this be- half.
30.
F.I.Rs. can be registered by a victim, a witness or some- one else with the
knowledge of the crime. The police can record three different kinds of statements.
The first kind of statement is one which can be recorded as an F.I.R., the
second kind of statement is one which can be recorded by the police during the
investigation, and the third kind of statement is any kind of statement which
would not fall under any of the two categories mentioned above. Evidence is the
matter of testimony manifesting the fact on a particular precision or circum-
stances. The First Information Report is not by itself a substantial piece of
evidence and the statement made therein can- not be considered as evidence
unless it falls within the purview of Section 32 of the Evidence
Act. It is an admitted fact that the original first informant because of the
injuries caused by the applicants. The relative importance of a First
Information Report is far greater than any other statement recorded by the
police during the course of the investigation. It is the foremost information
the police gets about the com- mission of an offence and which can be used to
corroborate the story put-forward by the first informant under Section
157 of the Evidence Act or to contradict his version by facts
under Section 145 of the Evidence Act in case he is summoned as a witness
in the case by the Court. It may happen that the informant is the accused
himself. In such cases, the First Information Report lodged by him cannot be
used as an evidence against him because it is embodied in the basic structure
of our Constitution that a person cannot be compelled to be a witness against
himself.
31.
In certain cases, the First Information Report can be used under Section
32(1) of the Evidence Act or under Section 8 of the Evidence Act
as to the cause of informant's death or as a part of the informant's conduct. Section
32 of the Evidence Act reads as under:-
“32. Cases in which
statement of relevant fact by person who is dead or cannot be found, etc., is
relevant.
Statements, written or
verbal, of facts in issue or relevant facts made by a person who is dead, or
who cannot be found, or who has become incapable of giving evidence, or whose
presence cannot be procured without an amount of delay or expense which, under
the circum- stances of the case, the court considers unreasonable, or who is
kept out of the way by the adverse party, are themselves relevant facts in the
following cases:”
(1) When it relates to
cause of death:- When the statement is made by a person as to the cause of his
death, or as to any of the circumstances of the transaction which resulted in
his death, in cases in which the cause of that person's death comes into
question. Such statements are relevant whether the person who made them was or
was not, at the time when they were made, under expectation of death, and
whatever may be the nature of the proceeding in which the cause of his death
comes into question.
(2) Or is made in
course of business:- When the statement was made by such a person in the
ordinary course of business and, in particular, and without prejudice to the
generality of the foregoing provisions of this clause, when it consists of any
entry or memorandum made by him in books kept in the ordinary course of
business. (2A) Or is made in discharge of professional duty etc.:-
When the statement
consists of an entry or memorandum made by such person in the discharge of
professional duty or of an acknowledgement written or signed by such person in
respect of the receipt of money, goods, securities or property of any kind, or
of a document used in commerce, written or signed by him or of the date of a
letter or other document usually dated, written or signed by him.
(3) Or against
interest of maker:- When the statement is against the pecuniary or proprietary
interest of the person making it, or when, if true, it would expose him or
would have exposed him to a criminal prosecution or to a suit for damages.
Explanation: A recital
as regards boundaries of immovable property in document containing such
statements, as to the nature or ownership or possession of the land of the
maker of the statement or of adjoining lands belonging to third persons, which
are against the interests of the maker of the statement, are relevant and it is
not necessary that the parties to the document must be the same as the parties
to the proceedings or their privies.”
(4) Or gives opinion
as to public right or custom, or matters of general interest:- When the
statement gives the opinion of any such person as to the existence of any
public right or custom or matter of public or general interest, of the
existence of which, if it existed, he would have been likely to be aware, and
when such statement was made before any controversy as to such right, custom or
matter had arisen.
(5) Or relates to
existence of relationship:- When the statement relates to the existence of any
relationship by blood, marriage or adoption between persons as to whose
relationship a [by blood, marriage or adoption] the person making the statement
had special means of knowledge, and when the statement was made before the
question in dispute was raised.
(6) Or is made in will
or deed relating to family affairs:- When the statement relates to the
existence of any relationship by blood, marriage or adoption between persons
deceased and is made in any will or deed relating to the affairs of the family
to which any such deceased person belonged, or in any family pedigree, or upon
any tombstone, family portrait or other thing on which such statements are
usually made, and when such statement was made before the question in dispute
was raised.
(7) Or in documents
relating to transactions mentioned in section 13, clause (a): When the
statement is contained in any deed, will or other document, being a deed, will
or other document which relates to any trans- action by which a right or custom
was created, claimed, modified, recognized, asserted or denied or which was
inconsistent with its existence, as mentioned in clause
(a) of section
13.
Explanation I:- Such
statement is relevant where the question in the proceeding now before the court
is as to the existence of the right or custom or if such state- ment related to
facts collateral to the proceeding and it is not necessary that the parties to
the document must be the same as the parties to the proceeding or their
privies.
Explanation II:- A
recital as regards boundaries of immovable property in a document containing
such statement, as to the nature or ownership or possession of the land of the
maker of the statement or of adjoining lands belonging to third persons, shall
be relevant and it is not necessary that the parties to the document must be
the same as the parties to the proceeding or their privies.” (8) Or is made by
several persons and expresses feelings relevant to matter in question.-
When the statement was
made by a number of persons, and expressed feelings or impressions on their
part relevant to the matter in question.
Illustrations
(a) The question is whether
A was murdered by B: or
(b)
A dies of injuries
received in a transaction in the course of which she was ravished. The question
is whether she was ravished by B: or The question is, whether A was killed by B
under such circumstances that a suit would lie against B by As widow.
Statements made by A
as to the cause of his or her death, referring respectively to the murder, the
rape and the actionable were under consideration, are relevant facts.
(b) The question is as
to the date of As birth. An entry in the diary of a deceased surgeon regularly
kept in the course of business, stating that, on a given day he attended A's
mother and delivered her of a son, is a relevant fact.
(c) The question is,
whether A was in Calcutta on a given day.
A statement in the
diary of a deceased solicitor, regularly kept in the course of business, that,
on a given day, the solicitor attended A at a place mentioned in Calcutta, for
the purpose of conferring with him upon specified business, is a relevant fact.
(d) The question is,
whether a ship sailed from Bombay harbour on a given day.
A letter written by a
deceased member of a merchant's firm by which she was chartered to their
correspondents in London, to whom the cargo was consigned, stating that the
ship sailed on a given day from Bombay harbour, is a relevant fact.
(e) The question is,
whether rent was paid to A for certain land.
A letter from A's
deceased agent to A, saying that he had received the rent on A's account and
held it at As orders, is a relevant fact.
(f) The question is,
whether A and B were legally married.
The statement of a
deceased clergyman that he married them under such circumstances that the
celebration would be a crime, is relevant.
(g) The question is,
whether A, a person who cannot be found, wrote a letter on a certain day. The
fact that a letter written by him is dated on that day, is relevant.
(h) The question is, what was the cause of the
wreck of a ship.
A protest made by the
Captain, whose attendance cannot be procured, is a relevant fact.”
32.
If the informant dies, the First Information Report can be, unquestionably,
used as a substantive evidence. A prerequisite condition must be fulfilled
before the F.I.R. is taken as a substantive piece of evidence i.e. the death of
the informant must have nexus with the F.I.R. filed or somehow having some link
with any evidence regarding the F.I.R. This is what has been explained by this
Court in the case of Damodar Prasad v. State of U.P. [(1975) 3 SCC 851 : AIR
1975 SC 757].
33.
There are plethora of decisions taking the view that an F.I.R. can be a dying
declaration if the informant dies of his injuries after lodging the same.
[See Munna Raja v. State of M.P. ((1976) 3 SCC 104 : AIR 1976 SC
2199)].
34.
Another important thing is that for an F.I.R. lodged by a deceased person to be
treated as substantial, its contents must be proved. It has to be corroborated
and proved for there to be any value of the same in the case. The F.I.R. can be
used by the defence to impeach the credit of the person who lodged the F.I.R.
under Section 154(3) of the Evidence Act. In case the death of the
informant has no nexus with the complaint lodged i.e. he died a natural death
and did not succumb to the injuries inflicted on him in relation to a matter,
the contents of the F.I.R. would not be admissible in evidence. In such circum-
stances, the contents cannot be proved through the Investigating Officer. The
Investigating Officer, in the course of his deposition, should not be
permitted to depose the exact con- tents of the F.I.R. so as to make them
admissible in evidence. All that is permissible in law is that the
Investigating Officer can, in his deposition, identify the signature of the
first informant and that of his own on the First Information Report and he can
depose about the factum of the F.I.R. being registered by him on a particular
date on a particular police station.
35.
It is absolutely incorrect on the part of the Trial Court and the High Court to
say that in the absence of the first in- formant, the police officer can prove
the contents of the F.I.R. as per Section 67 of the Evidence Act.
36. In
the case of Harkirat Singh v. State of Punjab [(1997) 11 SCC 215 :
AIR 1997 SC 3231], this Court observed as under:-
“In our considered
view, the High Court was not justified in treating the statement allegedly made
by Kharaiti Ram during inquest proceedings as substantive evidence in view of
the embargo of Section 162, Cr. P.C. Equally unjustified was the High
Courts reliance upon the contents of the FIR lodged by Walaiti Ram who, as
stated earlier, could not be examined during the trial as he had died in the
meantime. The contents of the FIR could have been used for the purpose of
corroborating or contradicting Walaiti Ram if he had been examined but under no
circumstances as a substantive piece of evidence.”
37.
In the case of Hazarilal v. State (Delhi Administration) [(1980) 2 SCC 390 :
AIR 1980 SC 873], this Court, in para 7, observed as under:-
“The learned counsel
was right in his submission about the free use made by the Courts below of
statements of witnesses recorded during the course of
investigation. Section 162 of the Code of Criminal Procedure imposes
a bar on the use of any statement made by any person to a Police Officer in the
course of investigation at any enquiry or trial in respect of any offence under
investigation at the time when such statement was made, except for the purpose
of contradicting the witness in the manner provided by S. 145 of the
Indian Evidence Act. Where any part of such statement is so used any part
thereof may also be used in the re-examination of the witness for the limited
purpose of explaining any matter referred to in his cross-examination. The only
other exception to this embargo on the use of statements made in the course of
an investigation relates to the statements falling within the provisions
of S. 32 (1) of the Indian Evidence Act or permitted to be proved
under Section 27 of the Indian Evidence Act. Section 145 of
the Evidence Act provides that a witness may be cross-examined as to previous
statements made by him in writing and reduced into writing and relevant to
matters in question, without such writing being shown to him or being proved
but, that if it is intended to contradict him by the writing, his attention
must, before the writing can be proved, be called to those parts of it which
are to be used for the purpose of contradicting him. The Courts below were
clearly wrong in using as substantive evidence statements made by witnesses in
the course of investigation. Shri. H.S. Marwah, learned counsel for the Delhi
Administration amazed us by advancing the argument that the earlier statements
with which witnesses were confronted for the purpose of contradiction could be
taken into consideration by the Court in view of the definition of “proved”
in Section 3 of the Evidence Act which is, “a fact is said to be
proved when, after considering the matters before it, the Court either be- lieves
it to exist or considers its existence so probable that a prudent man, ought,
in the circumstances of the particular case to act upon the supposition that it
exists”. We need say no more on the submission of Shri. Marwah except that the
definition of proved does not en- able a Court to take into consideration
matters, including statements, whose use is statutorily barred.”
38.
We have to our benefit a very lucid and erudite judgment of the Madhya Pradesh
High Court in the case of Umrao Singh v. State of M.P. [1961 Criminal
L.J. 270]. In this case, the petitioners Umrao Singh and Kunwarlal were
convicted of the offence punishable under Section 323 of the Penal Code and sentenced
to two months rigorous imprisonment. The case of the prosecution was that on
27th August 1959, the petitioners named above belaboured Barelal who had
gone out to graze his cattle, and who was blamed by the accused to have caused
damage to their crops. Barelal, however, died a natural death after six months
of the occurrence, but before he could be examined as a witness. It was
contended that the F.I.R. lodged by Barelal could not be considered by the
Courts below and that the evidence of the solitary witness, Pannala was
unreliable, as he was not mentioned in the list of witnesses filed by the
prosecution. In this set of facts, the Court observed as under:-
“4. It is true that
the first information report is not by itself a substantive piece of evidence
and the statement made therein cannot be considered as evidence un- less it falls
within the purview of S. 32 of the Evidence Act. It is an admitted
fact that Barelal did not die because of the injuries caused by the
petitioners. Section 32 was inapplicable.
5. It is true that in
the list of witnesses Pannalal's name has been mis-spelt as ‘Dhannalal’, but
this doubt is removed when the first information report is looked into. There,
Pannalal's name is mentioned. Shri. Dey contends that it is not permissible to
look at the F.I. R. at all. In my opinion this argument cannot be accepted. It
is proved by Ram Ratan P.W. 6 that he recorded the report which was lodged by
Barelal There is a distinction between factum and truth of a statement. It has
been aptly pointed out by Lord Parker C.J. in R. v. Willis (1960) 1 W.L.R. 55
that evidence of a statement made to a witness by a person who is not himself
called as witness may or may not be hearsay.
It is hearsay and
inadmissible when the object of the evidence is to establish what is contained
in the statement; it is not hearsay and is admissible when it is proposed to
establish by the evidence not the truth of the statement but the fact that it
was made. According to Ram Ratan, Barelal mentioned Pannalal's name to him.
Applying the above dictum, Ramratan's evidence is inadmissible to prove that
Pannalal was in fact present at the time of the occurrence; but Ram Ratan's
statement is admissible to prove that Barelal had mentioned the name of
Pannalal to the witness.”
39.
In the overall view of the matter, we are convinced that no case is made out
for interference.
40.
In the result, this Appeal fails and is hereby dismissed.
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